Yoshihide Suga wins party vote, becoming Japan's likely next prime minister

Yoshihide Suga, who is almost certain to replace Shinzo Abe as Japan's prime minister, is a farmer's son with a reputation for inscrutability.

Yoshihide Suga will replace Shinzo Abe as Japan's prime minister.

Yoshihide Suga said he will continue his predecessor Shinzo Abe's policies. Source: AP

Japan's ruling party has elected chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga its new leader, making him all but certain to replace Shinzo Abe as the country's next prime minister.

Mr Suga easily won the vote, taking 377 of the 534 valid votes cast by Liberal Democratic Party lawmakers and regional representatives, significantly ahead of his two rivals.

Given his party's legislative majority, he is expected to handily win a parliamentary vote on Wednesday and become prime minister, succeeding Mr Abe, who is resigning for health reasons.

The 71-year-old has pledged a continuation of Mr Abe's policies, a promise he repeated in accepting the party's nomination as leader.
"With this national crisis of the coronavirus, we can't afford to have a political vacuum," he said.

"In order to overcome the crisis and give the Japanese people a sense of relief, we need to succeed in what Prime Minister Abe has been implementing," he added.

"This is my mission."

Even before he formally announced his run, Mr Suga had won the support of key factions within the ruling party, with his candidacy viewed as promising stability.

The LDP chose to poll only its lawmakers in parliament and three representatives from each of the country's 47 regions, eschewing a broader ballot including rank-and-file members that officials said would have taken too long to organise.
Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga
Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga is almost certain to become Japan's next prime minister. Source: Yomiuri Shimbun

'A shining Japan'

The format was seen as further bolstering Mr Suga against his two competitors, former defence minister Shigeru Ishiba and LDP policy chief Fumio Kishida.

Mr Abe, who smashed records as Japan's longest-serving prime minister with more than eight years in power over two terms, declined to endorse any one candidate.

But he pledged to "fully support" Mr Suga after his win, saying he had watched him "working hard and quietly for the nation and people" in his role as chief cabinet secretary.

"Let's build a shining Japan by overcoming the coronavirus crisis, with new LDP chief Suga at the helm," he added.

Mr Abe made the shock announcement he would step down with a year left in his mandate in late August, saying a recurrence of the ulcerative colitis he has long battled made it impossible for him to stay on.

Analysts say Mr Suga is unlikely to make any major agenda reversals, and the candidate himself has said his run is intended to ensure a continuation of Abe's key policies.

The next prime minister will face a raft of complicated challenges.

The country was already in recession before the coronavirus pandemic, and many of the gains of the signature Abenomics economic policy are now in danger.

Mr Suga has said kickstarting the economy will be a top priority, along with containing the virus - essential if the postponed Tokyo 2020 Olympics are to open as planned in July 2021.

Snap election?

There are also diplomatic challenges on the agenda, including protecting the US alliance and navigating ties with China as global opinion hardens against Beijing after the coronavirus and unrest in Hong Kong.

"Now is a difficult time for Japan as the US is putting pressure on China," said Makoto Iokibe, a professor of political and diplomatic history at the University of Hyogo.

"But simply following the path Washington is pursuing and raising tensions with China is not in Japan's interest," he told AFP.
One key unknown remains whether Mr Suga will decide to call a snap general election to consolidate his position and avoid being seen as a caretaker facing a new vote in a year - when Mr Abe's mandate would have ended.

Several senior government officials have mooted the possibility, perhaps as early as October, but Mr Suga has been circumspect so far.

A large part of Japan's fractious opposition has recently come together in a new bloc, hoping to pose a stronger challenge to a ruling party that has held power for all but a few years in the last six decades.

But the LDP would still be heavily favoured in any new elections, even if Mr Suga's personal appeal to voters remains an open question.

"Mr Suga is capable of implementing policies by controlling bureaucrats, but his weakness is in winning the heart of the public," said Mr Iokibe.


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4 min read
Published 14 September 2020 4:55pm
Updated 14 September 2020 5:48pm
Source: AFP, SBS


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