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The Financial Express

Japan's Abe getting easy victory: media polls

| Updated: October 25, 2017 05:06:56


Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe delivers a speech in support for his party’s candidate during an campaign in Tokyo. -AP Photo Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe delivers a speech in support for his party’s candidate during an campaign in Tokyo. -AP Photo

Media polls indicate Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s ruling coalition is going to win the general election to be held on Sunday.

The coalition may keep its two-thirds majority in the more powerful lower house of parliament, the polls say.

Japanese may not love Abe, but they appear to want to stick with what they know, rather than hand the reins to an opposition with little or no track record.

Uncertainly over North Korea and its growing missile and nuclear arsenal may be heightening that underlying conservatism.

Japanese voters may not love Abe, but they appear to want to stick with what they know, rather than hand the reins to an opposition with little or no track record. Uncertainly over North Korea and its growing missile and nuclear arsenal may be heightening that underlying conservatism.

“I buy into Prime Minister Abe’s ability to handle diplomacy,” said Naomi Mochida, a 51-year-old woman listening to Abe campaign earlier this week in Saitama prefecture, outside of Tokyo.

“I think the most serious threat we face now is the North Korea situation. I feel Prime Minister Abe has been showing the best tactics to handle the situation, compared to other politicians including past prime ministers,” Naomi Mochida said.

Abe dissolved the lower house a little more than three weeks ago on the day it convened for a special session, forcing the snap election.

The election is “mainly about the Abe administration trying to lock in its position ... and with success, get Prime Minister Abe re-elected as president of the LDP in September and rule until after the Tokyo Olympics, until 2021,” Michael Green, a Japan expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C., said on a call with journalists.

For the rest of the world, an Abe victory would likely mean a continuation of the policies he has pursued in the nearly five years since he took office in December 2012.

That includes a hard line on North Korea. Abe says it’s not the time for dialogue and pushed for tougher sanctions to try to pressure leader Kim Jong Un to abandon the country’s weapons development, report agencies.

He backed a loose monetary policy that has boosted the stock market and breathed temporary life into a long-stagnant Japanese economy, though many of the gains haven’t filtered down to working people, raising doubts about the sustainability of the recovery.

A strong election showing would boost Abe’s chances of being reappointed to another three-year term as leader of the Liberal-Democratic Party next September, extending his premiership.

That could make Abe the longest-serving prime minister in the post-World War II era.

It would also give him more time to try to win over a reluctant public to his longtime goal of revising the postwar Japanese Constitution.

He may get the two-thirds majority he needs in parliament for a constitutional amendment, but any change also needs approval in a public referendum.

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