Gender equality in Japan? Ruling party race shows female PM is still a
way off
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[September 29, 2021]
By Elaine Lies
TOKYO (Reuters) - The secretaries handing
out ballots as Japan's ruling party chose the next prime minister on
Wednesday were all women. The power brokers and lawmakers doing the
voting were overwhelmingly men.
For the first time ever, two women stood in the race to become leader of
the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, whose parliamentary dominance means
the winner will become the new premier.
The obstacles before them - and all Japanese women - were on display as
rows of mostly dark-suited men in the LDP party gathered to vote for
their next leader.
The winner, Fumio Kishida, has spoken about diversity, but few are
optimistic about imminent, significant change in a nation where just
under 10% of members of parliament are women and 8.1% of company
presidents are female.
"The environment for a woman to become prime minister still hasn't been
reliably created," said youth activist Momoko Nojo.
"It's not that there aren't potential leaders, but just from looking at
the voting it was very clear that those who vote and choose are LDP
lawmakers ....and when you look at the number of women in parliament,
it's still very low."
In 2020, Japan fell in a global ranking of gender parity in a World
Economic Forum report, ranking 121 out of 153 nations last year compared
to 101 in 2012 when Shinzo Abe won the prime minister job for a second
time.
As recently as 2018, a internal investigation found a major medical
school in the country had been cutting women's entrance-exam scores for
years.
From the start, the two women in the party leadership race - Sanae
Takaichi and Seiko Noda - were seen as longshots despite having cabinet
experience and decades-long political careers.
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Candidates for the presidential election of the ruling Liberal
Democratic Party pose with papers with their sign and words prior to
a debate session held by Japan National Press Club September 18,
2021 in Tokyo, Japan. The contenders are (L to R) Taro Kono, the
cabinet minister in charge of vaccinations, Fumio Kishida, former
foreign minister, Sanae Takaichi, former internal affairs minister,
and Seiko Noda, former internal affairs minister. Eugene Hoshiko/Pool
via REUTERS/File Photo
Out of the two, the ultra-conservative Takaichi
gained more popularity. That was partly due to Abe's backing but
also thanks to support for her conservative views, such as opposing
separate surnames for married couples and supporting males-only
succession for the Imperial family.
Though Abe touted "womenomics" and vowed to make Japan a nation
where "women can shine," his government was forced to delay its
target of raising the percentage of women in leadership posts to 30
percent by a decade to 2030 from 2020. Women make up fewer than 10
percent of managers at most Japanese companies.
"The (LDP) is itself very much lagging behind in promoting gender
equality in the party, and the kind of women who are in more
leadership positions tend to be, of course, very conservative also
and not necessarily feminists," said Koichi Nakano, a Sophia
University political science professor.
Women in Tokyo agreed.
"They're all extolling gender equality, but it all seems to just be
a show this time," said 60-year-old Yuko Sakamoto.
"That's really, really obvious."
(Additional reporting by Rikako Maruyama and Irene Wang; Editing by
Ana Nicolaci da Costa)
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