Poll
show majority of Japanese oppose security bills as vote looms
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[September 14, 2015]
TOKYO(Reuters) - More than half of
voters in Japan are opposed to their government's plans to enact
legislation this month that would allow Japanese troops to fight abroad
for the first time since World War Two, a newspaper poll showed on
Monday.
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Despite big public protests, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's ruling
bloc wants to pass the security bills before parliament ends its
session on Sept. 27. A vote in the upper house is expected this
week.
A poll carried out over the weekend and published on Monday by Asahi
Shimbun showed 54 percent of respondents opposed the legislation
against 29 percent who backed it, and 68 percent saw no need to
enact the bills during the current session.
Three-quarters of the respondents said the debate has been
insufficient, in line with other surveys.
Abe's ruling bloc has a majority in the upper house, but opposition
parties have vowed to use all possible means to prevent a vote,
including delaying procedures by submitting time-consuming
non-confidence and censure motions.
Support for Abe's government fell to 36 percent, the survey showed,
the lowest rate since he took the office in December 2013 and down
from 38 percent in last month's poll. Abe's disapproval rating
inched up to 42 percent from 41 percent.
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Abe last week won a rare second consecutive term as a ruling party
chief, and hence premier, pledging to retain focus on reviving the
world's third-largest economy and deepen debate on revising its
pacifist constitution.
(Reporting by Kaori Kaneko; Editing by Linda Sieg and Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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