The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Tokyo votes in local polls with national consequenc­es

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TOKYO: Tokyo went to the polls yesterday in a local election that could have national consequenc­es as the capital’s governor mounts a challenge to the party of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whose popularity has slumped.

Former TV anchorwoma­n Yuriko Koike is hoping her coalition can beat the local arm of Abe’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which holds a majority in the 127-seat Tokyo assembly.

Koike, who was elected as governor in a landslide last year, is rumoured to have her eye on Abe’s job.

The energetic 64-year-old quit the LDP this month to lead her own party, Tomin First no Kai (Tokyo Residents First), and is hoping to storm the maledomina­ted chamber after forging an alliance with the local chapter of the Komeito party.

Polls suggest the LDP could lose its leading position to Koike’s coalition.

With approval ratings topping 60 per cent, Koike has pushed to rein in overspendi­ng on the Tokyo 2020 Olympic stadium and venues, pledging to cutting wasteful expenditur­e under the LDP’s watch.

The popular politician has upturned convention by allowing television cameras into what were traditiona­lly closed-door meetings.

A former defence and environmen­t minister, she is also responsibl­e for overseeing a controvers­ial relocation of the world famous Tsukiji fish market.

Tokyo residents, and many others across Japan, have applauded her approach.

“From what I see, the Tokyo assembly (dominated by the LDP) is seriously old fashioned and needs to change,” said Tokyo voter Yoshikazu Niwa, 68, who voiced his support for Koike.

A total of 259 candidates are running for seats in the chamber that administer­s a city that is home to nearly 14 million people.

Polls opened at 7am (2200 GMT Saturday) and are scheduled to close at 8pm.

While the vote is local, it is an important indicator of national political sentiment and comes as Abe, who was elected prime minister in late 2012, suffers a series of setbacks.

In the last week, his defence minister Tomomi Inada was in hot water over remarks she made at a local LDP rally. She asked for voters’ support and said it was a request from her ministry and the Self-Defense Forces, Japan’s military.

The SDF is supposed to be politicall­y neutral, and Inada retracted the remark.

Abe, 62, is also under fire over allegation­s he showed favouritis­m to a friend in a business deal.

The claims come a few months after the conservati­ve premier was forced to deny he had connection­s to the controvers­ial director of a school which had purchased government land at a huge discount — and counted Abe’s wife as its honorary principal.

A recent poll by public broadcaste­r NHK showed Abe’s government had a 48 per cent support rating, down three per centage points from a month earlier. His disapprova­l rating rose six per centage points to 36 per cent, the survey showed.

All of the LDP’s 57 candidates won assembly seats in the last city election in 2013 when Abe was riding high in the polls and pushing a plan to kickstart Japan’s long-lumbering economy.

From what I see, the Tokyo assembly (dominated by the LDP) is seriously old fashioned and needs to change. Yoshikazu Niwa,Tokyo voter

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Koike (right) delivers a speech to voters atop a campaign van as election campaign officially kicks off for Tokyo Metropolit­an Assembly election, on the street in Tokyo in this file picture.
— Reuters photo Koike (right) delivers a speech to voters atop a campaign van as election campaign officially kicks off for Tokyo Metropolit­an Assembly election, on the street in Tokyo in this file picture.

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