Hello and welcome to the details of Tokyo voters deal blow to ruling LDP in key poll ahead of national vote and now with the details
Nevin Al Sukari - Sana'a - Public support for Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, who took office in October, has been at rock-bottom for months, partly because of high inflation, with rice prices doubling over the past year. — Reuters pic
TOKYO, June 23 — Voters in Tokyo decisively knocked Japan’s ruling party from its position as the largest group in the city assembly, results showed Monday, a warning sign for Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s unpopular government before July elections.
Japanese media said it was a record-low result in the key local election for the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which has led the country almost continuously since 1955.
Public support for Ishiba, who took office in October, has been at rock-bottom for months, partly because of high inflation, with rice prices doubling over the past year.
The LDP took 21 Tokyo assembly seats in Sunday’s vote, including three won by candidates previously affiliated with the party but not officially endorsed following a political funding scandal.
This breaks the party’s previous record low of 23 seats from 2017, according to the Asahi Shimbun and other local media.
Tomin First no Kai, founded by Tokyo governor Yuriko Koike, increased its seats in the 127-member assembly to 31, becoming the largest party.
“This was a very tough election,” Shinji Inoue, head of the LDP’s Tokyo chapter, said Sunday as exit polls showed a decline in the party’s seats.
The funding scandal “may have affected” the result, while policies to address inflation “didn’t reach voters’ ears very well” with opposition parties also pledging to tackle the issue, Inoue said.
Within weeks Ishiba will face elections for parliament’s upper house, with reports saying the national ballot could be held on July 20.
Cost of living
Voters angry with rising prices and political scandals deprived the 68-year-old’s ruling coalition of a majority in the powerful lower house in October, its worst general election result in 15 years.
Polls this month showed a slight uptick in support, however, thanks in part to policies to tackle high rice prices.
Several factors lie behind recent shortages of rice at Japanese shops, including an intensely hot and dry summer two years ago that damaged harvests nationwide, and panic-buying after a “mega-quake” warning last year.
Over this time some traders have been hoarding rice in a bid to boost their profits down the line, experts say.
Not including volatile fresh food, goods and energy in Japan were 3.7 per cent higher in May than a year earlier.
To help households combat the cost of living, Ishiba has pledged cash handouts of ¥20,000 (RM595) for every citizen ahead of the upper house election.
The opposition Democratic Party For the People (DPP) won seats for the first time in the Tokyo assembly vote, securing nine.
The DPP’s campaign pledge for the July election includes sales tax cuts to boost household incomes.
Sunday’s voter turnout rate was 47.6 per cent, compared to the 42.4 per cent four years ago, according to local media.
A record 295 candidates ran — the highest since 1997, including 99 women candidates, also a record high.
The number of women assembly members rose to 45 from 41, results showed. — AFP
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