MillenniumPost
World

Japan PM Kishida's coalition to keep majority but lose seats

Japan PM Kishidas coalition to keep majority but lose seats
X

Tokyo: Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's governing coalition is expected to keep a majority in a parliamentary election Sunday but will lose some seats in a setback for his weeks-old government grappling with a Coronavirus-battered economy and regional security challenges, according to exit polls.

Kishida's Liberal Democratic Party and its junior coalition partner Komeito together were expected to win between 239 to 288 seats in the 465-member lower house, the more powerful of Japan's two-chamber Diet, public broadcaster NHK's exit poll showed.

The LDP alone was expected to win 212-253 seats, with Komeito gaining 27-35 seats, according to the projections.

Their combined seats will exceed a parliamentary majority of 233 a loss from 305 seats previously.

Kishida, 64, was elected prime minister on October 4 after winning the leadership race in his ruling party, and dissolved the lower house only 10 days after taking office.

The party's conservative leaders saw him as a safe status-quo successor to Yoshihide Suga and his influential predecessor Shinzo Abe.

Exit polls were more or less in line with media predictions. Whether Kishida's party alone can maintain a majority, and how many seats it will lose from 276 before the election, was still unclear.

Official results were expected by early Monday.

Kishida's immediate task has been to rally support for a party weakened by Suga's perceived high-handed approach to pandemic measures and his insistence on holding the Tokyo Summer Olympics despite widespread opposition because of a high number of Coronavirus cases, which have since dropped sharply.

Kishida repeatedly stressed his determination to listen to the people and to address criticism that the nine-year Abe-Suga leadership had fanned corruption, tamed bureaucrats and muzzled opposing opinions. The campaign has largely centered on COVID-19 response measures and revitalizing the economy.

While the ruling party stressed the importance of having a stronger military amid worries over China's growing influence and North Korea's missile and nuclear threat, opposition parties focused on diversity issues and pushed for gender equality.

Opposition leaders complain that recent LDP governments have widened the gap between rich and poor, did not support the economy during the pandemic and stalled gender equality and diversity initiatives. Japan this year ranked 120th in the World Economic Forum's 156-nation gender-

gap ranking.

Next Story
Share it