Japan’s governing party, stung by an extensive slush funds scandal, lost all three seats in parliamentary by-elections on Sunday in a major setback for Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in seeking re-election as his party’s leader in the autumn.
The loss is considered punishment by voters for the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) scandal that erupted last year and has undermined Kishida’s leadership. However, the party’s loss of power is unlikely, because the opposition is fractured.
“The results were extremely severe,” LDP Secretary-General Toshimitsu Motegi told reporters. “We humbly accept the severe results, and we will do our utmost to regain the trust from the public as we continue our effort to reform and tackle the challenges.”
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The liberal-leaning main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (CDPJ) clinched all three seats in Shimane, Nagasaki and Tokyo, final vote counts posted on prefectural election committee Web sites showed.
The LDP previously held all three vacated seats. It did not field its own candidates in the Tokyo and Nagasaki by-elections because of the apparent low support for the party.
It focused instead on defending the seat in the Shimane District that was vacated after the death of former LDP House speaker Hiroyuki Hosoda, who was linked to a number of alleged irregularities, including the ongoing slush fund scandal.
Akiko Kamei, the CDPJ candidate who beat former ministry of finance bureaucrat Norimasa Nishikori from the LDP in Shimane, said her victory in the district known as a “conservative kingdom” sent a big message to Kishida.
“I believe the voters’ anger over the LDP’s slush funds problem and the lack of improvement in daily lives in the prefecture translated into support for me,” she said.
CPDJ leader Kenta Izumi said that the by-elections were about political reforms.
“There are many voters across the country who also want to show [similar] views,” he said, adding that he would seek early national elections if reforms by the governing party are too slow.
The losses could reduce Kishida’s clout as LDP lawmakers might try to bring him down to put a new face ahead of the next general election.
Such a move would dash Kishida’s hope of running in the party presidential race in September for another three-year term.
As prime minister, he can call a snap election any time before the current term for the lower house expires in October next year.
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