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Eric Talmadge - 18 August, 2009
Campaigns begin for Japan election
TOKYO — Campaigning began Tuesday for one of the most hotly
contested elections Japan has seen in more than a decade and a major
poll said the party that has run the country for most of the past 55
years is lagging well behind the opposition.
The elections for the lower house of parliament, to be held Aug. 30,
are seen as one of the biggest tests Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic
Party has ever faced. If forecasts are correct, it could cost them
their control over the government and lead to the selection of a new
prime minister.
The Liberal Democrats have governed Japan alone or in a coalition
arrangement for all of the past 55 years except for a brief respite in
the early 1990s.
“Our party has been right in its economic policies,” Prime Minister
Taro Aso said in his kickoff speech. “We will press ahead. We are not
finished with our efforts to see economic recovery. Recovery is our
foremost priority.”
But a poll in the Asahi newspaper, a major daily, said the party has
only 21 percent support among voters, compared with 40 percent who say
they will opt for the opposition Democratic Party of Japan.
The ruling party has been plunging in support because of the weak
economy, increasing unemployment, a perceived lack of leadership and
its support of higher taxes. Its leader, Aso, is also deeply unpopular
for his failure to lead the country out of its troubles and his
tendency to make embarrassing gaffes.
Aso’s support rating was 19 percent in the Asahi poll, while his disapproval rating was 65 percent.
The Asahi poll of 1,011 voters was in line with other recent polls
by major media. A poll of that size would normally have a margin of
error of about 5 percentage points.
Aso and opposition leader Yukio Hatoyama have squared off twice in televised debates ahead of the official start of campaigning.
Aso has stressed that his party has delivered results and built up
the country from the ashes of defeat in World War II in 1945, while
alleging that the opposition is making promises of public spending and
social programs that it cannot pay for.
Hatoyama, meanwhile, has said Japan needs a change of government to
get itself out of its current morass, that it must cut wasteful
spending and rein in the power of bureaucrats, who have broad authority
over setting budgets and formulating laws.
“The day has come to change the history of Japan,” Hatoyama said on a stumping tour. “Let’s step into a new era with courage.”
Being contested are the 480 seats in the lower house, the more
powerful chamber of Japan’s bicameral parliament. Going into the
elections, the Liberal Democrats had 302 seats, and the Democratic
Party had 112. This will be the first election for the chamber since
September 2005.
The party that controls the lower house has the power to install the prime minister.
Source: Taragana
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