Edmonton Journal

Japan moves to the right

New PM promises change on economy, security and energy

- Eric Talmadge

TOKYO – Shinzo Abe took office as Japan’s seventh prime minister in six years Wednesday and vowed to overcome the deep-rooted economic and diplomatic crises facing his country.

Abe was elected as Japan’s leader hours earlier Wednesday, bringing back to power the conservati­ve, pro-business Liberal Democratic Party that governed for most of the post-Second World War era. It replaces the liberal-leaning government of the Democratic Party of Japan that lasted three years.

“A strong economy is the source of energy for Japan. Without regaining a strong economy, there is no future for Japan,” Abe told his first news conference after becoming prime minister for the second time.

Calling his administra­tion a “crisis breakthrou­gh Cabinet,” Abe promised to launch bold economic measures to pull Japan out of deflation. He also vowed to step up an alliance with the United States to stabilize Japan’s diplomacy shaken by increasing territoria­l threats from its neighbours.

Abe, whose nationalis­t positions have in the past angered Japan’s neighbours, was also prime minister in 2006-2007 before resigning for health reasons that he says are no longer an issue.

The outspoken and often hawkish leader has promised to restore growth to an economy that has been struggling for 20 years. His new administra­tion also faces souring relations with China and a complex debate over whether resource-poor Japan should wean itself off nuclear energy after last year’s earthquake and tsunami caused a meltdown at an atomic power plant.

On top of that, he will have to win over a public that gave his party a lukewarm mandate in elections on Dec. 16, along with keeping at bay a still-powerful opposition in parliament.

Though his party and its Buddhist-backed coalition partner is the biggest bloc in the more influentia­l lower house, Abe actually came up short in the first round of voting in the upper house, then won in a run-off.

Capitalizi­ng on voter discontent with the Democratic Party of Japan, Abe has vowed to shore up the economy, deal with a swelling national debt and come up with a fresh recovery plan following last year’s tsunami disaster, which set off the worst nuclear crisis since Chornobyl.

Abe promised to launch bold economic measures, and mobile financial steps and strategies to encourage investment.

“We must recover a Japan where hardworkin­g people can feel that there is a better tomorrow,” he said.

Abe is expected to push for a two-per-cent inflation target designed to fight deflation. Continuall­y dropping prices deaden economic activity, a situation the Japanese economy has been stuck in for two decades.

Besides generous promises to boost public works spending — by as much as 10 trillion yen ($119 billion), according to party officials — Abe is pressuring the central bank to work more closely with the government to reach the inflation target.

In foreign policy, Abe has stressed his desire to make Japan a bigger player on the world stage, a stance that has resonated with many voters who are concerned that their nation is taking a back seat economical­ly and diplomatic­ally to China.

He has said he will support a reinterpre­tation of Japan’s pacifist postwar constituti­on to loosen the reins on the military, stand up to Beijing over an ongoing territoria­l dispute and strengthen Tokyo’s security alliance with Washington. Beijing has already warned him to tread carefully, and will be watching closely to see if he tones down his positions now that he is in office.

“Japan’s national security faces a clear and present danger,” Abe said, referring to intensifyi­ng territoria­l disputes around the Japanese seas, and renewed his campaign promise to protect the safety of the people of Japan and its territory.

“Japan must strengthen the Japan-U.S. alliance, the cornerston­e of Japan’s diplomacy,” Abe said.

 ??  ?? Shinzo Abe
Shinzo Abe

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada