September 17, 2021
By Kiyoshi Takenaka and Elaine Lies
TOKYO (Reuters) -Candidates vying to become Japan’s next prime minister launched their campaigns on Friday, promising to restore popular trust in the ruling party by tackling issues such as income disparity, the coronavirus pandemic and climate change.
A scheduled leadership race for the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) took an unexpected turn two weeks ago when Yoshihide Suga said he would step down https://ift.tt/2Vb4fPR after only one year as prime minister, setting off a heated contest.
The winner of the Sept. 29 LDP leadership election will become prime minister by virtue of the party’s majority in the lower house of parliament, with vaccine minister Taro Kono widely seen as a leading contender.
The LDP’s image has been battered by public perceptions that Suga bungled the handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and lawmakers are keen for a fresh face to lead them into a general election expected within two months.
Kono https://ift.tt/3CpPQQ1, whose previous jobs include the foreign and defence portfolios, faces off against former foreign minister Fumio Kishida https://ift.tt/3nBQ1n4, Sanae Takaichi https://ift.tt/3zisNEz, who held the internal affairs ministry post, and Seiko Noda https://ift.tt/2XpA6h3, a former minister for gender equality.
Unlike last year’s LDP race, when Suga replaced then prime minister Shinzo Abe, grassroots LDP members will join lawmakers in casting ballots, making broad popularity more important than usual in the faction-dominated party.
A common theme on Friday was fighting income disparity and regaining voter trust before the election, with candidates appearing to step back from the growth policies of Abe, known as “Abenomics”, which Suga maintained.
“We shouldn’t have a pre-set idea on the size of any stimulus package. What’s important is to spend money on investment for the future,” Kono said. “Among them is to aid families with children.”
“Abenomics caused big changes in the economy, but corporate profits did not lead to higher wages. We must shift our focus toward boosting household income, from corporate profits,” he said.
The U.S.-educated Kono, at 58 is on the young side for a Japanese premier and is widely seen as frontrunner due to his popularity with the public, who regularly choose him as their favourite https://ift.tt/3nCIrsp for the top job. Investors https://ift.tt/3Ak9Lz9 have also recently warmed to Kono at Kishida’s expense.
Kono’s chances were bolstered this week when LDP heavyweight Shigeru Ishiba https://ift.tt/3zggbOj, who is popular with the party rank and file and had been considering his own candidacy, threw his support behind him.
TWO WOMEN
But Kono has a reputation as a maverick, and party elders may favour the soft-spoken Kishida, 64, who hails from one of the party’s more dovish factions, due to perceptions he may be more successful than Kono at building consensus.
Kishida echoed Kono by pledging to ease income disparities, which he said the pandemic had worsened, reiterating that he would do this by building a new form of capitalism and redistributing more income to households.
He has also proposed a spending package of more than 30 trillion yen.
“But I think the biggest theme of the LDP election is restoring faith in the party,” he said.
Takaichi, 60, a disciple of Abe, Japan’s longest-serving premier, and a member of the LDP’s most conservative wing, said she would take up Abe’s goal of revising the pacifist constitution.
Abe publicly endorsed her on Twitter on Thursday, praising her “determination to defend Japan’s sovereignty and her strong view of the nation”.
Noda, 61, who joined the race on Thursday after winning the support of the required 20 lawmakers, is seen as a long shot. But she could have a significant impact on the race by making it harder for one candidate to win a majority in the first round.
It is the first time two women have run in an LDP leadership race and Noda promised to work for more diversity.
“On my becoming Japan’s first female prime minister, I would accelerate society’s paradigm shift,” she said.
“I would strive to fill half of the ministerial posts in my cabinet with women.”
(Additional reporting by Ju-min Park, Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by William Mallard and Michael Perry)
Source Link Candidates for Japan PM want to fight income disparities
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