Hawkish LDP sweeps to victory in Japan

Three years after being dumped from power and written off by some as a political force, Japan’s conservative Liberal Democrats…

Three years after being dumped from power and written off by some as a political force, Japan’s conservative Liberal Democrats have scored a remarkable electoral comeback in a victory with potentially ominous implications for the rest of Asia.

With votes still being counted from yesterday’s general election, the LDP was projected to win control of the 480-seat Lower House with coalition partner New Komeito.

Hawkish LDP leader Shinzo Abe, who has pledged to revive Japan’s stagnant economy and aggressively defend its territorial interests, is now certain to become the nation’s next prime minister – it’s seventh in six years.

The LDP’s liberal-left rival, the Democratic Party, was pummelled at the polls for breaking electoral promises on welfare, tax and defence, shedding over 200 seats. Japanese prime minister Yoshihiko Noda, who lost much of his initial public support by backing a tax rise and supporting nuclear power, conceded defeat last night.

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Mr Abe wants to boost spending on public works and restart Japan’s nuclear reactors, most of which are idling in the wake of last year’s Fukushima nuclear disaster. His remedy for the economy, which is sliding into its fifth recession in 15 years, involves forcing the nation’s central bank to buy billions of yen in special government bonds.

“What’s first and foremost is to achieve an economic recovery and pull Japan out of deflation,” he said on television last night.

‘Warmonger’

But it is his foreign policy views that worry some in Asia. Mr Abe has repeatedly pledged to challenge Japan’s pacifist constitution and increase defence spending, a strategy likely to anger China and South Korea. The China Daily has dubbed him a “warmonger with dangerous designs”. In campaign speeches he dwelled on deteriorating Sino-Japanese ties, which have soured over a bitter territorial dispute.

“Japan’s beautiful seas and its territory are under threat,” he said earlier this month. “I promise to protect Japan’s land and sea, and the lives of the Japanese people no matter what.”

Mr Abe is part of a group of conservative politicians who believe Japan must end what they see as national self-flagellation of the nation’s war record. After he took over leadership of the LDP in October he made a pilgrimage to Yasukuni Shrine, the Tokyo war memorial that enshrines Japan’s second World War leaders, along with more than two million soldiers.

Many analysts predict, however, that Mr Abe will tread carefully while in office to avoid friction with the US. Japan’s media says Washington, which is committed to defending Japan if it comes to blows with China over the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyu islands, has already made it clear it wants both sides to tone down the heated rhetoric of the past few months.

The Buddhist-backed New Komeito has confirmed it is willing to form a coalition government, but the LDP has not ruled out co-operating with the right-wing Japan Restoration Party, set to win about 45 seats. An LDP/Restoration government is likely to take a harder line on foreign policy issues.

Rebuilding Japan

It will be Mr Abe’s second stint as Japan’s leader. His 12 previous months in office from 2006 to 2007 were consumed by his passion for rebuilding what he famously called a “beautiful Japan”. In practice that meant a botched attempt to scrap the war-renouncing constitution and a distracting campaign to deny Japan’s involvement in rounding up thousands of sex slaves in the second World War. He left office after a fierce battering from the media, complaining of a stress-induced digestive disorder that forced him to miss sessions of the Diet legislature for repeated trips to the toilet. Mr Abe will be confirmed as prime minister on December 26th.

David McNeill

David McNeill

David McNeill, a contributor to The Irish Times, is based in Tokyo