Monday, September 10, 2012
Japan's PM Noda likely to keep party leadership
By Tetsushi Kajimoto
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda looked very likely on Monday to hang on to one of the worst jobs around - leading the demoralised ruling party to almost certain crushing election defeat.
Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda stands next to the Japanese national flag upon his arrival at a news conference at his official residence in Tokyo August 24, 2012. REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao |
The Democratic Party of Japan election commission confirmed on Monday that besides Noda, there would be three fringe contenders running in the September 21 leadership contest - former farm ministers Hirotaka Akamatsu and Michihiko Kano and an ex-internal affairs minister Kazuhiro Haraguchi
With no party heavyweights on the roster, Noda is likely to retain his post as government and party chief.
In his election pledge, Noda said he would bring a lasting end to deflation that has plagued Japan for a decade and hit a 1 percent inflation target within a year. The Democrats' third prime minister in as many years also promised to work towards ending reliance on nuclear power, though he gave no deadline.
"I cannot abandon the government halfway through. With that in mind, I've decided to run in the leadership race," he told a joint news conference with the other candidates.
But Noda's days in power appear numbered with opinion polls showing the Democrats trailing the opposition Liberal Democratic Party and a new grouping led by a popular Osaka mayor Toru Hashimoto which plans to contest the next general election expected before the end of the year.
"It looks certain that Noda will win," Hidenori Suezawa, chief strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities said.
"But financial markets are focusing on the main opposition's leadership race later this month and Hashimoto's 'Ishin no Kai' party, as they will play a key role in a political reshuffle after general elections, not the Democrats," Suezawa said.
LDP leader Sadakazu Tanigaki said on Monday he would not seek re-election. The party's former defence and foreign ministers are in contention, with media reporting that the party's current No.2 Nobuteru Ishihara and former prime minister Shinzo Abe will also join the race slated for September 26.
The lower house's term ends in August 2013, but Noda promised to call an election "soon" in return for the opposition backing for his plan to raise sales tax to offset rising social security costs.
Last month's passage of the tax bill marked a rare break in Japan's long political gridlock and the biggest accomplishment of Noda's one-year tenure, but it came at a steep price.
About 70 lawmakers left the Democrats, with the rest bracing for voter backlash for backing the tax hike and other unpopular policies, such as Noda's push to restart nuclear reactors idled after last year's Fukushima disaster.
The government is due to present a national energy plan in coming days that will try to respond to the growing anti-nuclear sentiment among voters without alienating pro-nuclear industrial lobbies, but risk satisfying neither side.
If he is re-elected, Noda's immediate challenge will be to win approval of the opposition-controlled upper house for new borrowing in the current budget to avoid a government shutdown.
Whoever takes over after the election, many expect to be held in November, will face substantial unfinished business and a long list of deep-rooted problems dogging the world's third-largest economy and its 10th most populous country.
Further steps beyond sales tax hikes are needed to prevent Japan's public debt from piling up, the nuclear phase-out will require a major overhaul of the energy sector and pulling Japan out of deflation calls for major market and structural reforms.
The rebuilding after the magnitude 9 earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan's northeast on March 11, 2011 is far from over and the full decommissioning of the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant and the clean-up of its surroundings will take decades.
Tokyo's efforts to revive its exports through free trade deals have also stalled amid political stalemate, while relations with Asian peers South Korea and China soured in the past weeks as simmering territorial disputes flared up.
(Additional reporting by Shinji Kitamura; Writing by Tomasz Janowski, Editing by Jonathan Thatcher)
- Chieftains handing out dubious titles
- Titles with no standing draw renewed attention
- Nightmare over topless pictures
- ‘Body buried 13 storeys deep’

- Pakatan MPs to attend swearing-in
- Striptease queen married five times in search of true love, says author
- ‘Divine empowerment’ for Muslim women
- Kuala Dimensi chief fails to set aside subpoena served by Ling’s lawyers
- Sabah CM slams assemblymen over poverty eradication efforts
- Dept set to fight peat fires
- ‘Don’t go out to Straits of Malacca at night’
- DOE declares three states as ‘no open burning’ zones
- East coast hit by the haze, too
- Macalister Road to be reopened today
- Former council chiefs rapped over building plan
- US stocks down after Bernanke hints at slowing stimulus
- Malaysian equities to face selling pressure on Thursday
- Public Invest Research: TSH Resources becoming big cap plantation company
- CIMB Research ups MY EG target price to RM1.74
- Assore - Assmang approves ferromanganese joint venture in Malaysia
- Malaysia-Market factors to watch on June 20(Thursday)
- Kulim to take New Britain Palm Oil Ltd private?
- Nusa Gapurna rejects PKNS offer to up stake in PJ Sentral
- AirAsia wants no further delays in opening of new low-cost terminal KLIA2
- AirAsia signs RM27.5bil engine deal
- AirAsia X shares worth up to RM1.66 each
- Use of psychometrics assessment for employees can be controversial
- Low bids for Hwang-DBS due to the banking group’s poor Q3 results
- Reality check on Asean Economic Community, is it rather ambitious?
- Sumatec shareholders to vote on Kazakhstan oil and gas asset buy
- Paul Revington is glad to be back to train the Malaysian team
- Heavy task on Faizal’s shoulders
- Singapore Open: Chong Wei Feng fights to survive
- Rachel owes her rich vein of form to change in technique
- Future looks gloomy for men’s squash when Beng Hee calls it a day
- Gavin Green confident he can take on title-holders this weekend
- Zhang switches focus on developing golf in China
- Thaworn hopes to find his ‘A’ game in Selangor Masters
- Khairy: RM8mil to be forked out for Sukma due to lack of sponsorship
- A chance for local cyclists to shine
- Rahul survives weekend of harsh hurdles in Norfolk
- MGF set wheels in motion to unearth young talents
- Steady as Jie goes
- Ferrer loses title after opening round loss
- Heat edge Spurs in overtime to force Game 7 in NBA Finals
- Singapore's air turns "hazardous" as Indonesian fires rage
- Nightmare over topless pictures
- ‘Body buried 13 storeys deep’
- Chieftains handing out dubious titles
- Striptease queen married five times in search of true love, says author
- Titles with no standing draw renewed attention
- Pakatan MPs to attend swearing-in
- It’s Honda Accord now for ministers
- Fake Facebook posting claims housewife is offering sex
- Somali Islamist rebels attack U.N. base, 22 dead
- Nightmare over topless pictures
- Use of psychometrics assessment for employees can be controversial
- Singapore's air turns "hazardous" as Indonesian fires rage
- We need to be careful about cosmetic surgery
- ‘Body buried 13 storeys deep’
- AirAsia X shares worth up to RM1.66 each
- NS trainee gives birth in camp toilet
- Another flash mob ahead of gathering
- Assore - Assmang approves ferromanganese joint venture in Malaysia
- Sumatec shareholders to vote on Kazakhstan oil and gas asset buy

