Campaigning begins for Japan's parliamentary election
UNB
Publish: 15 Oct 2024, 02:20 PM
TOKYO,
Oct 15 (AP/UN B) - Official campaigning for Japan's Oct. 27 parliamentary
election began Tuesday with new Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba seeking a mandate
for his policies and for reforms after the governing party's political funds
scandal.
More than 1,300
candidates were expected to enter the races for the 465-seat Lower House before
registration closes later Tuesday.
Ishiba called the snap
election after he took office as prime minister on Oct. 1. As customary for
Liberal Democratic Party leaders over the past decade, he was to start his
campaign in Fukushima to renew his pledge to support the area's recovery from
the 2011 nuclear disaster.
With the early election,
Ishiba is seeking to secure a majority in the lower house, the more powerful of
Japan's two parliamentary chambers, before the congratulatory mood fades.
The move has been
criticized as prioritizing an election rather than policies and for allowing
little debate.
A majority for the
ruling coalition would be 233 seats between his LDP and its junior coalition
partner Komeito. Prior to the dissolution, the coalition held 288 seats,
including 256 by LDP.
The main opposition
Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, which briefly ruled Japan from
2009-2012, sees the public anger over the LDP funds scandal as a rare chance to
gain ground by appealing to conservative swing voters. The liberal-leaning CDPJ
is making a conservative shift and now has a centrist leader Yoshihiko Noda,
also a former prime minister.
"A leadership
change is the biggest political reform," Noda said.
Political watchers say
Japan's opposition has remained too fractured to push the governing party out
of power, which it has held almost without interruption in postwar times.
While support ratings in
Kyodo News survey for Ishiba's new government already dipped from above 50% to
42% just over a week from taking office, LDP was still by far a voter favorite
among all political parties.
End/UNB/AP/MB