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Hatoyama and dozens of other members of Kan's ruling Democratic Party of Japan have expressed concern with the prime minister's leadership, creating a deep rift. That has complicated Kan's efforts to unite the government behind his reconstruction plans, which involve a huge injection of funds and possibly tax increases. Even Kan backers expressed concerns over his post-tsunami record. "We admit Prime Minister Kan's crisis management was not perfect," said lawmaker Kazunori Yamanoi. "But passing a no-confidence motion and forcing him to step down and dissolve the parliament would only cause further delays in the reconstruction process." March's magnitude 9.0 quake and the massive tsunami that followed damaged the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, causing the worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl in 1986. About 80,000 residents have been forced to evacuate towns contaminated by the radiation-leaking plant. Kan's fortunes were sagging even before the crisis began, but have plummeted since. In the 1990s, Kan was a crusading health minister who stood up to his own bureaucracy to lift the lid on a horrific AIDS scandal, but he was seen as an uninspiring prime minister even before the earthquake with a popularity rating below 20 percent. He emerged as prime minister last June only after other leaders of his Democratic Party resigned. He already is Japan's fifth leader in four years.
[Associated
Press;
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