The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

836 plan to run as parties hurry to prepare for snap election

- By Masakazu Matsushita and Masashi Yamaguchi Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writers

Th e nu mb e r of candidates scheduled to run in the next House of Repr e s ent at ive s election was 836 as of Dec. 31 2020, including those in the process of being approved, according to a Yomiuri Shimbun tally. The ruling and opposition parties are hurrying to make preparatio­ns for the dissolutio­n and a general election as the term for lower house members expires on Oct. 21 this year.

When Prime Mi n i s t e r Yoshihide Suga was asked about the dissolutio­n at a press conference on Dec. 25, he stressed, “For the time being, we will do our utmost to deal with the novel coronaviru­s.” As the spread of infections continues unabated, he intends to prioritize measures to combat the virus and then find a time to dissolve the house.

The lower house has 465 seats. According to The Yomiuri Shimbun’s count, 770 people have indicated their intention to run in single- seat constituen­cies ( 289 seats), and 66 people in the proportion­al representa­tion race (176 seats), excluding candidates who are running for both.

So far, the Liberal Democratic Party has unofficial­ly nominated candidates in over 260 constituen­cies, while Komeito has announced its intention to field candidates in 10 constituen­cies. The focal point for the LDP and Komeito is the coordinati­on of candidates in the Hiroshima No. 3 constituen­cy, after former Justice Minister Katsuyuki Kawai left the LDP in a bribery scandal over the 2019 House of Councillor­s election, and Komeito decided to back deputy party leader Tetsuo Saito without consulting the LDP. The Hiroshima prefectura­l chapter of the LDP reacted by filing a petition with the party’s headquarte­rs to nominate Rintaro Ishibashi, a prefectura­l assemblyma­n who was selected through an open recruitmen­t process. If the confrontat­ion drags on, it may affect cooperatio­n between the LDP and Komeito in elections nationwide.

The LDP is also competing with multiple candidates in seven other constituen­cies, including Gunma No. 1 and Niigata No. 2, and is hurrying to make arrangemen­ts.

The opposition parties, on the other hand, are facing the challenge of consolidat­ing their candidates. The Constituti­onal Democratic Party of Japan is fielding official candidates in 203 constituen­cies and the Japanese Communist Party in 125. The parties are coordinati­ng, with candidates overlappin­g in 67 constituen­cies. The CDPJ,

in cooperatio­n with the Democratic Party for the People and the Social Democratic Party, is poised to field more than 233 candidates, which is equivalent to a majority of seats in the lower house. But in three constituen­cies it is also competing with the DPFP, which has candidates in 21 constituen­cies.

The opposition parties are aiming to work together in the double supplement­ary election for the Hokkaido No. 2 constituen­cy in the lower house and the Nagano constituen­cy in the upper house, which will be held on April 25. In both constituen­cies, the CDPJ has a certain footing, and it hopes to gain momentum for the next lower house election by uniting the opposition candidates and defeating the LDP candidate.

Nippon Ishin no Kai ( Japan Innovation Party), which keeps its distance from the opposition coalition, has informally nominated candidates in 58 constituen­cies. In addition to its stronghold in the Kansai region, the group will actively field candidates in the Tokyo metropolit­an area, hoping to make the leap to becoming a national party. The Social Democratic Party, NHK kara Jikokumin o Mamoru To (The Party to Protect Citizens from NHK), and Reiwa Shinsengum­i are also aiming to expand their parties.

There are whispers within the LDP about the timing of the dissolutio­n and the general election. Potential dates appear to be: on the same day as the double supplement­ary elections to be held on April 25; on the same day as the Tokyo metropolit­an assembly election to be held by July; or after the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympic­s.

After the Suga administra­tion took office last September, many in the LDP had hoped for an early dissolutio­n while the Cabinet approval rating was still high. However, the resurgence of the coronaviru­s outbreak and the “politics and money” issues involving former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and former agricultur­e minister Takamori Yoshikawa have caused the party’s approval rating to plummet, so the timing of the dissolutio­n is now being narrowed down to spring or later.

The success or failure of infection control, including the progress of vaccinatio­n, is likely to affect the dissolutio­n strategy. (Jan. 5)

 ?? Yomiuri Shimbun file photo ?? The Diet Building
Yomiuri Shimbun file photo The Diet Building

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