Japan dissolves the parliament
Dr. Jassim Taqui
DG Al-Bab Institute for Strategic
Studies
Islamabad,
October 14, 2021: Japan’s
powerful lower house of parliament was dissolved Thursday in a formal step for
an Oct. 31 general election that could determine how long Prime Minister Fumio
Kishida remains in office.
The election comes a little more than three weeks
after Kishida took office as prime minister. Any major loss of seats could
undermine the premier’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s faith in his
leadership, increasing the chances he’ll be dispatched through the “revolving
door” that claimed six Japanese premiers between 2007-2012.
Kishida has said he wants to maintain his ruling
coalition’s majority in the 465-seat House of Representatives, a modest target
he’s almost certain to achieve. That would allow for a significant reduction in
numbers, given that the LDP and its junior partner Komeito together controlled
more than 300 seats before dissolution.
While none of the opposition parties boast the support
of more than single figures, they’ve forged an alliance that includes the
Japanese Communist Party, which is cooperating in many constituencies to try to
chip away at the ruling coalition’s majority.
Any major gains in seats for the group would add to
troubles for Kishida after some media surveys have shown him having the lowest
approval ratings for a new leader since the financial crisis of 2008.
Kishida has focused his election pledges on building a
“new capitalism” in which the fruits of economic growth are spread more widely.
Markets initially gave the plan a thumbs down, sending Nikkei 225 Stock Average
to its longest losing streak since 2009 at the start of this month.
He has distanced himself from an earlier proposal to
increase a capital gains tax on securities investments following the market backlash.
The premier’s policies include increasing pay for some public sector workers
and strengthening tax breaks for companies that increase salaries. Kishida has
nonetheless said he’ll maintain the easy monetary policy of his former boss,
Shinzo Abe.
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