Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s ruling bloc is headed for a big victory in this month’s upper house election, media surveys show, a win that would end a parliamentary deadlock and set the stage for Japan’s first stable government since 2006.
The anticipated victory would give the Japanese leader a mandate for his “Abenomics” recipe that aims to end prolonged stagnation with a mix of hyper-easy monetary policy, fiscal spending and structural reforms including deregulation.
However, a big win could also be a mixed blessing if members of his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), buoyed by victory and with no national election required until 2016, oppose painful reforms many say are needed to revive growth.
Newspaper surveys taken on Thursday and Friday and published yesterday showed the LDP and its coalition partner, the New Komeito party, were on track to win more than 70 of the 121 seats up for grabs in the July 21 poll for the 242-seat chamber.
With the coalition’s 59 uncontested seats, that would hand them a hefty majority and end a “twisted parliament” in which the opposition controls the upper house, hampering policy implementation.
“Hubris is a big problem,” Chuo University political science professor Steven Reed said.
“The real question is whether the LDP has really become more unified or whether it was just a way of getting back in power,” he said.
Japan has had seven prime ministers since the LDP’s charismatic Junichiro Koizumi ended a rare five-year term in 2006.
Abe succeeded Koizumi, only to quit abruptly after leading the LDP to a massive upper house loss in 2007.
Abe, 58, returned to power in December last year for a rare second term after the LDP-led bloc handsomely won a December election for parliament’s powerful lower house.
However, the coalition has since lacked a majority in the upper chamber, which can block legislation.
The LDP could even win the 72 seats it needs to secure an upper house majority on its own, the Asahi Shimbun forecast showed, the first time the long-dominant conservative party has done so since losing there in 1989.
The LDP would still be unlikely to dump New Komeito because it relies on the lay Buddhist group that backs the smaller party to help get votes.
The opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), which surged to power for the first time in 2009 to end more than half a century of almost non-stop LDP rule only to be ousted in December last year, looked certain to suffer a bad loss.
Forecasts suggested they could win fewer than half of the 44 contested seats they held before the election.
The gloomy outlook for the DPJ, which had promised to pry policy control away from bureaucrats and pay more heed to consumers than companies, raises doubts about its own future as well as the continued existence of a true two-party system.
Abe’s critics worry that he will shift his focus from fixing the economy to pushing his conservative agenda, centered on revising the post-World War II pacifist constitution and recasting Japan’s wartime history with a less apologetic tone.
That would further fray ties with China and South Korea, where bitter memories of Japan’s wartime militarism run deep.
However, the media surveys showed that the LDP and two smaller parties that also favor revising the constitution were likely to fall short of the two-thirds majority needed to bring revisions to a public referendum.
The LDP first wants to revise the US-drafted charter to allow changes to be brought to a public referendum after approval by a majority of both houses of parliament, rather than the two-thirds now required under the document’s Article 96.
The New Komeito is wary about changes.
“Even if they had a two-thirds majority, they can’t do whatever they feel like on the constitution,” Chuo University’s Reed said. “Even to revise Article 96, they will have to negotiate. It won’t be a simple slam-dunk.”
The surveys by the Asahi, Mainichi, Nikkei and Yomiuri newspapers and Kyodo news agency showed that 20 percent to 50 percent of voters were undecided.
Turnout is expected to be low.
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