The fallout from a scandal-tainted minister's suicide and
mismanaged pensions swirled yesterday, threatening the chances of
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's ruling camp in a July upper
house election.
Agriculture Minister Toshikatsu Matsuoka's suicide on Monday,
hours before he was to face questioning in parliament, coincided
with a slump in Abe's approval ratings ahead of a July upper house
election, his first big electoral test.
"I am worried that (recent developments) will have considerable
impact on the upper house election," Environment Minister Masatoshi
Wakabayashi, who will fill in as farm minister told reporters after
the regular cabinet meeting.
"It will be tough for the Liberal Democratic Party."
Matsuoka, 62, had come under fire for a series of political
funding scandals, and questions about his suitability for the farm
post were raised as soon as he was appointed in September.
Domestic media said Abe bore responsibility for appointing the
scandal-tainted Matsuoka and keeping him in the job.
"This is a major blow ahead of the upper house election," said
the conservative Sankei newspaper of the suicide.
Ordinary voters agreed the affair was damaging. "Abe's ability
to lead and bring together a team may be called into question,"
said Masayoshi Motteki, 62, who runs a restaurant and supports the
LDP.
A ruling coalition loss in the upper house election would not
force Abe to resign, because the more powerful lower chamber elects
the prime minister.
But defeat would allow the opposition to block key legislation
and a major loss would almost certainly spark calls from his own
party for him to step down.
Analysts say a setback for Abe's pro-market government in the
poll could sour foreign investors' view on Japanese stocks.
Pension outrage
Abe's popularity had sagged sharply even before the suicide,
mostly because of voter outrage over the failure of the government
to keep track of some 50 million pension premium payments, meaning
retirees could be short-changed.
Anger over corruption was another factor.
A survey by the Asahi Shimbun conducted before the
suicide and published yesterday showed Abe's support rate had sunk
to 36 percent, down eight points from just a week ago and the
lowest level since he took office in September.
Opposition parties had threatened to move a no-confidence motion
against the health minister on Tuesday if the ruling camp tried to
push through the lower house a bill to drastically reform the
scandal-plagued Social Insurance Agency, which manages public
pensions.
But LDP Secretary-General Hidenao Nakagawa told reporters the
ruling coalition would postpone a vote on that bill and instead
submit one to help fix what media called the "vanishing pension".
And then it would seek to enact the legislation as a package.
Political analysts said there might still be time for Abe's
cabinet to recover its footing ahead of the election.
But some voters said they would not soon forget.
"This incident will still be in my mind at the time of the
election, so I think it would influence the way I vote," said
23-year-old Internet company worker Megumi Kumatabara.
Abe, at 52, Japan's youngest prime minister since World War II,
won praise soon after taking office on the diplomatic front for
repairing chilly ties with China.
But support for Abe, who is pushing a conservative agenda that
includes revising Japan's pacifist constitution and boosting its
global security role, sagged after gaffes and funding scandals,
including one that forced a minister to resign.
The LDP and its junior partner need to win a total of 64 of the
121 seats up for grabs in the July election to maintain their
majority in the 242-seat upper house. Some analysts had said that
would have been tough even before the latest developments.
(China Daily May 30, 2007)