Japan PM Suga to replace key party ally ahead of election -media
Send a link to a friend
[August 31, 2021]
By Antoni Slodkowski and Leika Kihara
TOKYO (Reuters) -Japanese Prime Minister
Yoshihide Suga is set to replace an unpopular long-term ally as he seeks
to shore up support ahead of a party leadership election he must win
before the general election planned for October, media said on Tuesday.
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) Secretary General Toshihiro Nikai told
Suga he would step down at a meeting on Monday, the reports said.
"I've been in the Secretary General post for more than five years, I
want you to do the reshuffle without hesitation," Nikai told Suga,
according to the public broadcaster NHK.
Nikai was instrumental in helping Suga become prime minister last year
and was also the first among LDP faction chiefs to throw his group's
support behind the premier in this year's contest.
But some parliamentarians have voiced their unease with the amount of
power wielded by Nikai, 82, who has held the key LDP post, with control
over campaign funds, since August 2016 - the longest in the party's
history.
Suga's rival for the party leader, former foreign minister Fumio Kishida,
sparked ire from Nikai after he proposed https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/japans-suga-faces-likely-challenge-sept-29-party-poll-2021-08-25
limits on executive posts and promised to promote young and middle-level
lawmakers over heavyweights last week.
The proposal was seen as Kishida's bid to attract grassroots LDP members
who, unlike last year, will vote along with members of parliament and
who, fearful of losing their seats, may be wary of following their
elders' orders.
The reshuffle of the party executive, including Nikai, was set to take
place next week, Kyodo news agency reported. Suga will instruct his
party and government to craft economic stimulus measures and an extra
budget to help fund them within the week, Kyodo reported, citing an
unnamed senior ruling party official.
PARTY GRANDEES
Suga's move was "without a doubt" aimed at helping him win the backing
of party grandees, such as Suga's predecessor, Shinzo Abe, and Finance
Minister Taro Aso, said Corey Wallace, assistant professor at Kanagawa
University.
"It's about the use of party funds and distributing party posts,"
Wallace said. "Nikai wasn't particularly popular inside the party and I
don't think anybody would've tolerated him any longer after his
record-long run."
[to top of second column]
|
Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga speaks during a news
conference announcing to extend a state of emergency on COVID-19
pandemic at prime minister's official residence in Tokyo, Japan,
August 17, 2021. Kimimasa Mayama/Pool via REUTERS//File Photo
Abe's stance will be particularly closely watched
given his influence inside two largest factions of the LDP - his own
Hosoda group and the second-largest faction led by Aso - as well as
among the conservative wing of the LDP, experts say.
Ten members of the LDP upper house members close to Suga, who don't
belong to any party faction, confirmed on Tuesday that they would
back the premier in the leadership race.
The winner of the party chief contest is all but assured of being
the premier due to the LDP's majority in the lower house and will
guide the party through a general election, with the government
considering a plan to hold the poll on Oct. 17.
Suga's support ratings are at record lows as he failed to capitalise
on delivering the Olympics for the country, being hit hard by a
fresh wave of coronavirus infections. The government has declared a
fourth state of emergency in most of Japan amid a sluggish
vaccination rollout.
An opinion poll on Monday showed Suga's possible rivals for
the LDP leader job, such as Administrative Reform Minister Taro Kono,
in charge of Japan’s vaccination push, and former defence minister
Shigeru Ishiba, were more popular.
Both Kono and Ishiba have not decided whether to run.
The LDP and its allies are not expected to lose their coalition
majority in the powerful lower house, but forecasts suggest that
Suga's party could lose its outright majority, an outcome that would
weaken whoever is leading the LDP.
(Reporting by Leika Kihara and Antoni Slodkowski; Additional
reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka, Daniel Leussink and Tetsushi Kajimoto;
Editing by Stephen Coates, Gerry Doyle and Nick Macfie)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|