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He gained respect from the public in the 1990s when as health minister he exposed a government cover-up of HIV-tainted blood products that caused thousands of hemophilia patients to contract the virus that causes AIDS. Kan, along with Hatoyama, was one of several members in 1996 to found what eventually became the Democratic Party of Japan. "I grew up in a typical Japanese salaryman's family," Kan said Thursday. "I've had no special connections. If I can take on a major role starting from such an ordinary background, that would be a very positive thing for Japanese politics." He proved to be a quick study as finance minister after taking the job in January with little background in economics or fiscal policy. Some former skeptics, who had worried about his preference for spending, now express cautious optimism about his potential as prime minister. "After he got the job as finance minister, he realized how serious Japan's fiscal problem is and will be," said Masaaki Kanno, chief economist at JPMorgan Securities Japan and a former senior official at the Bank of Japan. In the written candidate's statement Friday, Kan identified economic recovery as the biggest challenge facing Japan, whose economy will almost certainly be overtaken in size by China this year. While exports and factory output are rising, unemployment and deflation are worsening. "I will tackle and pull Japan out of deflation through comprehensive measures from the government and the Bank of Japan," he said in the statement. He pledged to resume fiscal reforms and work toward sustainable finances, including possible tax reform, to ensure a strong social security system for Japan's aging population. The Democrats are hoping that the resignations Wednesday of Hatoyama and the party's No. 2 Ichiro Ozawa
-- both of whom were embroiled in political funding scandals -- will give it a fresh face for July's elections. A poor performance in the upper house elections, where half the seats are up for grabs, would not threaten the Democrats' grip on power because they command a large lower-house majority. But heavy losses would likely force the party to woo new coalition partners to ensure smoother passage of bills.
[Associated
Press;
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