Sowetan

Japanese election to test voters’ faith in premier

Nepotism claim could hurt Abe

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Tokyo – Just a few months ago, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe looked to be cruising to a third term that would make him Japan’s longest-serving leader and put him on track to achieving his dream of revising its post-war, pacifist constituti­on.

But suspicions he may have helped a friend get favoured treatment for a business, then rammed legislatio­n through parliament to close the session and end debate over the issue, have led to a slump in support.

A metropolit­an assembly election in Tokyo on July 2, campaignin­g for which starts today, could give clues about how stable his administra­tion really is – a key concern of global investors.

“Things are unravellin­g fast for Abe and his inner circle,” said Gerry Curtis, a professor emeritus at Columbia University. “I still put my money on Abe surviving and getting a third term, but I am willing to wager much less than I would have put on the table a week ago.”

At the core of Abe’s troubles are concerns he may have intervened to help Kake Gakuen (Kake Educationa­l Institutio­n), whose director Kotaro Kake is a friend, win approval for a veterinary school in a special economic zone.

The government has not granted such an approval in decades due to a perceived glut of veterinari­ans.

Abe has repeatedly denied doing Kake any favours.

Potentiall­y more troublesom­e than the suspicions themselves is the impression among many voters that Abe and his aides, unchalleng­ed and arrogant after more than four years in office, tried to suppress the scandal, in part by smearing an ex-official who went public with allegation­s and by rushing a contentiou­s bill through parliament to close off debate.

“Chief cabinet secretary [Yoshihide] Suga’s haughty attitude at his news conference and his attack on the former official personally were a mistake,” said one Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) legislator. “That sort of condescend­ing attitude makes people angry.”

Abe, who resigned abruptly after a troubled 2006-07 tenure as premier, can seek another three-year consecutiv­e term as LDP leader, and hence premier, from September 2018.

No general election needs to be held until late next year, but voters have a chance to express their views soon. –

 ?? /TORU HANAI /REUTERS ?? Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
/TORU HANAI /REUTERS Prime Minister Shinzo Abe

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