TOKYO — Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, who once enjoyed an unprecedented degree of public support, faces a serious challenge Sunday in the House of Councilors election.
According to a survey last week by the Yomiuri Shimbun, Japan’s largest mass-circulation daily, support for the Koizumi Cabinet was at a record low of 35.7 percent, while 39.1 percent of those polled disapproved of the Cabinet. Other polls also indicated that approval ratings for Mr. Koizumi’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) had slipped.
“We don’t rely much on opinion polls, though we certainly have a sense of crisis,” said one LDP leader who asked not to be named.
The politician recalled the bitter experience of the 1998 House of Councilors election. Major polls had showed that the LDP would win more seats than it had held going into the election, but it ended up suffering a stunning defeat, which drove Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto from office.
Analysts attributed the LDP’s slump to mounting public dissatisfaction with the participation of Japan’s Self-Defense Forces (SDF) in the U.S.-led invasion and occupation of Iraq, and the pension-reform bills that the ruling coalition (the LDP and New Komeito, backed by Soka Gakkai, Japan’s largest lay Buddhist organization) forced through the Diet.
More than 100 lawmakers, including Cabinet ministers and opposition party members, had not paid their premiums for the compulsory national pension system. The opposition volunteered to disclose the payment records of members, but the LDP refused to do so, citing “privacy” concerns.
The nonpayment scandal and the shaky condition of the pension system itself “seemed to make more voters — especially in the countryside, including LDP strongholds — disenchanted with the ruling party,” said Akikazu Hashimoto, a professor of political science at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies.
Mr. Hashimoto added that the public disenchantment coincides with grinding recession in the countryside, where local economies have been hit hard by business restructuring.
“Those who have no hope for a pay raise began to worry that they would not get their pensions either as long as the LDP is in power,” he said.
“It should be no surprise that our party has been criticized for pension issues,” the unnamed LDP leader said. “But we’re making efforts to have the public understand our ideas and policies.”
During deliberations in the Diet, when Katsuya Okada, leader of the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), asked Mr. Koizumi why his pension premiums had been paid by a real-estate company for which he had never worked, the prime minister turned defiant, saying: “There is a variety of life. There are companies, and companies.”
“Mr. Koizumi’s performance has entertained the public. However, when it comes to money matters, more people have begun to question that performance,” said Jiro Yamaguchi, a professor of political science at Hokkaido University Graduate School.
Mr. Yamaguchi also noted that the prime minister was criticized for promising President Bush the SDF’s participation in the multinational force in Iraq without any political debate or explanation to the public.
Fifty-eight percent of those surveyed in mid-June by the Asahi Shimbun, a major daily, opposed SDF participation in Iraq, while 31 percent agreed.
Mr. Yamaguchi said world opinion of the U.S.-led war has grown more skeptical since the disclosure of abuses by American jailers and interrogators at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.
“Japan is not isolated from that opinion shift,” he said.
Meanwhile, Mr. Koizumi has appeared to introduce one surprise after another to regain his popularity. His government decided to bring together Hitomi Soga, a Japanese kidnapped by North Korea who was allowed to return to Japan in 2002, and her American husband, Charles Jenkins, a reputed Army deserter who remains in North Korea with their two daughters.
The reunion, favored by much of the Japanese public, is to be held in Indonesia today, two days before the House of Councilors election.
Mr. Koizumi has said flatly that bringing the family together has nothing to do with the elections, “and if you said so, that would be a lie.”
In the Sunday election, 320 candidates are competing for 121 seats — half the total in the House of Councilors — with 73 seats in the 47 prefectural districts, and 48 proportional-representation seats. Half of the less influential chamber’s seats are contested every three years.
If the LDP wins more than 56 seats this time, the party, which holds 66 seats not up for grabs this year, will have a majority in the chamber for the first time in 15 years. But that is unlikely, analysts and polls suggest.
The LDP slump, however, doesn’t really translate into a surge for the main opposition DPJ, because many eligible voters remain undecided and may not cast ballots, according to polls.
None of Japan’s political parties is luring back voters disillusioned by party politics, and they seem to be out of touch with citizens’ concerns. A growing number of Japanese are struggling to make ends meet, and say they can’t afford to pay a pension premium of about $120 a month.
“I don’t want to vote for anyone in particular, but I will go to the polls anyway just to give my vote to anyone but the LDP,” said Mitsuo Nakamura, one of the leaders of a group that helps an increasing number of homeless in downtown Tokyo.
“The DPJ doesn’t seem to be much different from the LDP,” she said. “I also disapprove of a two-party system, under which I fear the problems of an invisible minority like ours would be less and less likely to rise to the surface. And that only aggravates inequalities.”
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