2021 was a banner year for Fumio Kishida: He held off the competition in the Liberal Democratic PartyтАЩs leadership race to take the Prime MinisterтАЩs Office, demonstrated his pluck by daring to dethrone a veteran LDP secretary-general and carried the party to a solid victory in the Lower House election despite what was expected to be an uphill battle.
But thatтАЩs 2021тАЩs success and Kishida wonтАЩt be able to rest on those laurels for long, if at all.
The prime minister will face another stress test as the head of the LDP when voters head to the polls for the Upper House election, slated for the summer.
The omicron variant could also throw a wrench into his signature тАЬnew model of capitalismтАЭ initiative and other policy goals. Kishida will also need to decide how closely the LDP should cooperate with the right-leaning opposition party Nippon Ishin no Kai, particularly when it comes to constitutional amendment.
Ruling and opposition lawmakers, as well as the public, will pay close attention to whether KishidaтАЩs flexible and down-to-the-earth demeanor can guide the nation through the public health crisis and economic downturn, while LDP members will be looking to see how he deals with political challenges and whether he can further cement his support base to ensure his administrationтАЩs longevity.
тАЬWe are starting to see some тАШweakness,тАЩ but this тАШweaknessтАЩ is working not badly politically,тАЭ said Jun Iio, a professor of Japanese politics at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, referring to KishidaтАЩs willingness to change course on the я┐е100,000 handouts to qualified households with children.
Ruling party leaders originally agreed to provide half of the amount in cash and the other half in coupons, but Kishida reversed that position on the first day of the Lower House budget committee debate in mid-December after complaints from municipal officials and protests from opposition parties.
тАЬRegarding the я┐е100,000 handout, he wavered and was unreliable, but people think it shows that Mr. Kishida is good at listening to othersтАЩ opinions,тАЭ Iio said. тАЬThe question is whether Kishida can establish a style of governance and keep it stable.тАЭ
Encouraged by the Lower House election victory and a thoroughly disappointing showing by the largest opposition party, Kishida went on the offensive with his policy proposals but avoided direct confrontation with opposition lawmakers.
ThatтАЩs a significant contrast from recent leaders.
During his tenure, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at times jeered and mocked the opposition, while KishidaтАЩs predecessor, Yoshihide Suga, drew intense flak from opposing lawmakers for repeatedly reading from a script in a monotone voice, even if lawmakers had pressed for answers.
Instead, Kishida went into budget committee debates with what appeared to be a humbler approach. He explained the administrationтАЩs reversal on the handout was a result of listening to municipal government officials and debates among lawmakers.
Then, the day after a newspaper report revealed that the land ministry had overstated construction data for years, he ordered a third-party committee to investigate and submit findings within a month, proactively stifling attacks from opposition lawmakers.
тАЬIn this Diet session, I have explained my thoughts as carefully as I could,тАЭ Kishida said during a news conference on Dec. 21. тАЬIn order to be in line with the peopleтАЩs feelings, we have made a bold political decision to change our policy on matters where we perceive it to be necessary. The important thing is to listen carefully to the thoughts of the people.тАЭ
Once ridiculed as an тАЬindecisive man,тАЭ Kishida swiftly introduced drastic measures in response to the omicron variant. Within three days of the variantтАЩs detection in South Africa in late November, he approved a ban on new entries by foreign nationals and even barred foreign residents from certain countries.
While the Japanese public tends to agree with stricter border controls тАФ with 88% of respondents supporting the banning of new entries in a Nikkei poll in December тАФ those who have been seeking to enter the country are upset with another set of restrictions.
The public at large appeared to be forgiving after a mishap over the transportation ministryтАЩs request that airlines halt new bookings for flights to Japan. Despite his CabinetтАЩs approval ratings slightly edging down in recent Kyodo and Jiji polls, the numbers went up in Nikkei, Yomiuri and Asahi newspaper opinion surveys taken during December.
In the Nikkei poll conducted between Dec. 24 and 26, the CabinetтАЩs approval rating went up by 6 percentage points to 65%. Sixty-one percent of respondents also approved of the administrationтАЩs coronavirus response, the highest since the question first started to be asked in February 2020.
But those solid numbers could be in jeopardy if COVID-19 cases increase exponentially, and Kishida appears to be well aware that the severity of any outbreak will have a direct impact on his CabinetтАЩs approval rating, as was the case during the Suga administration.
тАЬThe issue for the time being will be whether Kishida can properly control the pandemic,тАЭ said Takuma Ohamazaki, a political analyst and CEO of election consulting firm J.A.G Japan. тАЬThe coronavirus response and the omicron variant will directly affect the direction of the administration.тАЭ
Even setting aside the pandemic, KishidaтАЩs calendar is packed. In an upcoming regular parliamentary session, expected to last around 150 days, the prime minister will be under pressure to deliver tangible results ahead of the Upper House election in the summer, especially raising wages for nurses and caregivers, as identified by Kishida as a priority in his тАЬnew model of capitalismтАЭ initiative.
On top of that, Kishida will seek to visit Washington to meet with U.S. President Joe Biden to showcase the Japan-U.S. alliance amid ChinaтАЩs growing assertiveness in the western Pacific.
тАЬThere is a possibility that something will happen that Mr. Kishida cannot control, and whether he can respond properly to whatever that may be will have implications for his ability to govern thereafter,тАЭ Iio said.
A lot will hinge on the Upper House vote.
If Kishida is able to secure a solid LDP victory in the Upper House election, he would be able to advance his agenda without having to call an election for three years. However, if the party performs poorly this summer, Kishida could end up being the LDPтАЩs scapegoat.
Even if he survived a poor Upper House showing, Kishida would have a difficult time managing parliament. If the LDP and its coalition partner Komeito donтАЩt hold onto their majority in the House of Councilors, a two-thirds supermajority would be required in the Lower House to overturn an Upper House veto.
Since the ruling coalitionтАЩs Lower House seat count falls short of that threshold, KishidaтАЩs policies would likely face gridlock. Such a situation has forced some administrations out of power in the past, including when Abe was prime minister for the first time in 2006 and 2007.
As far as intraparty threats go, there is already someone who appears to be angling to succeed Kishida: Sanae Takaichi, the LDPтАЩs policy council chairperson.
Kishida defeated Takaichi in the partyтАЩs leadership contest in late September, but her campaign тАФ backed by Abe тАФ finished second in the number of votes received from LDP lawmakers and served notice that she is becoming a force within the party that cannot be dismissed. Mainly absorbing support from conservative members of the partyтАЩs factions, Takaichi frequently appears in right-leaning magazines and on online programs.
She will most likely be active in the constitutional amendment debate, which will probably be reopened during the next parliamentary session, Ohamazaki said.
тАЬIt is hard to imagine that Kishida will be able to push through the issue of constitutional revision, but he also wants to avoid letting Takaichi take the credit,тАЭ Ohamazaki said. тАЬRather than saying Takaichi is a threat, it would be more accurate to say that it is difficult to handle her in the context of cautiously dealing with those advocating for constitutional amendment and hawks, who see her as their symbolic figure.тАЭ
To revise the Constitution, the LDP sees Nippon Ishin as an important asset. Ichiro Matsui, the partyтАЩs leader and mayor of Osaka, has even called for a referendum on constitutional amendment to be held on the same day as the Upper House poll.
At the same time, a division between the two parties was notable during DecemberтАЩs Diet session. They could not reach agreement on a ┬е1 million per month allowance earmarked for lawmakersтАЩ transportation, lodging and other expenses separate from their salaries. Nippon Ishin demanded an amendment to the legislation that would have forced lawmakers to disclose receipts showing how the allowance was used, but the LDP demurred.
Ahead of the Upper House vote, Nippon IshinтАЩs intention is to present the issue as part of broader concerns over money and politics, Ohamazaki said.
тАЬIt is a threat to the LDP,тАЭ he said.
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