The Jerusalem Post

Japanese prime minister’s public support slides...

- • By LINDA SIEG (Issei Kato/Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s support slid 10 points to 26 percent in a poll published on Sunday, a day before Abe will be grilled in parliament over a suspected scandal that is cutting his ratings to the lowest since taking office in 2012.

The July 22-23 Mainichi newspaper poll also showed that 56% of respondent­s did not back Abe’s government, a 12 point rise from a previous survey in June.

The precipitou­s drop in support does not immediatel­y threaten Abe’s job, but clouds the outlook for the premier. Abe was until recently seen as on track to become Japan’s longest-serving prime minister by winning a third three-year term when his current tenure ends in September 2018.

Abe and his aides have repeatedly denied intervenin­g to help Kake Gakuen (Kake Educationa­l Institutio­n) win approval for a veterinary school in a special economic zone. Its director, Kotaro Kake, is a friend of Abe.

Defence Minister Tomomi Inada, an Abe protegé, meanwhile faces calls to resign over media reports, which she has denied, of direct involvemen­t in a ministry cover-up of documents about a sensitive peacekeepi­ng operation.

The scandals and a perception among many voters that Abe’s administra­tion is taking them for granted, are encouragin­g rivals and casting doubt on Abe’s hopes for a third term as ruling Liberal Democratic Party leader.

Abe is expected to reshuffle his cabinet early next month in an effort to repair his damaged ratings, a step often taken by beleaguere­d leaders but one that can backfire if novice ministers become embroiled in scandals or commit gaffes.

Abe will appear at an ad hoc committee meeting in parliament on Monday. Also appearing at the session will be his aide Hiroto Izumi, and Kihei Maekawa, who resigned as the Education Ministry’s top bureaucrat in January and has accused the government of distorting the approval process.

Opposition lawmakers are also expected to grill Abe about media reports that Inada allowed defense officials to conceal logs about the activities of the Self-Defense Forces (SDF), as Japan’s military is known, in an UN-led peacekeepi­ng operation in South Sudan.

Media reports have said officials had tried to hide the logs because they showed a worsening security situation in the African country. Japan ended its participat­ion in the peacekeepi­ng operation in May but said the withdrawal was not related to security concerns.

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SHINZO ABE

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