The Mercury News

Suga wins party vote, all but assuring election as PM

- By Mari Yamaguchi

TOKYO >> Yoshihide Suga was elected as the new head of Japan’s ruling party on Monday, all but assuring that he will become the country’s prime minister when a parliament­ary election is held later this week.

Despite his low-key image, Suga, 71, has been an important figure in outgoing Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s administra­tion, serving as the government’s top spokespers­on in his role as chief Cabinet secretary. Abe announced last month that he would resign due to health problems.

Suga’s victory in the ruling Liberal Democratic Party vote virtually guarantees his election in a parliament­ary vote Wednesday because of the majority held by the LDP’s ruling coalition.

Suga, the son of a strawberry grower in northern Japan’s Akita prefecture, said he had come a long way.

“I will devote all of myself to work for the nation and the people,” he said in his victory speech.

He has said that his top priorities will be fighting the coronaviru­s and turning around a Japanese economy battered by the pandemic. He gained the support of party heavyweigh­ts and their wing members early in the campaign on expectatio­ns that he would continue Abe’s policies.

Suga received 377 votes in Monday’s vote to pick a successor to Abe. Former Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida, one of the other two contenders, received 89 votes and former Defense Minister Shigeru Ishiba got 68.

Suga has been a loyal supporter of Abe since Abe’s first stint as prime minister from 2006 to 2007. Abe’s tenure ended abruptly because of chronic illness and Suga helped him return as prime minister in 2012.

Suga repeatedly has praised Abe’s diplomacy and economic policies when asked about what he would like to accomplish as prime minister. He also has defended scores of favoritism and cronyism scandals, saying that investigat­ions into the cases were properly handled.

On the surface, the straight-faced Suga is known for offering bland comments at twice-daily televised news briefings.

But behind the scenes, he’s known for his iron-fist approach to getting jobs done as a policy coordinato­r and influencin­g bureaucrat­s by using the centralize­d power of the prime minister’s office, leading political watchers to call him the “shadow prime minister.” Some bureaucrat­s who have opposed his policies have reportedly been removed from projects or transferre­d elsewhere.

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