Right Turn
Japan is poised to take a sharp turn to the right,
as Japanese define the term, in the coming general election that will be held
Dec. 16. All indications point to a return of the Liberal Democratic Party
(LDP) under the leadership of the hawkish, one-time prime minister, Shinzo Abe.
Abe exuded confidence during a debate Nov. 30 at the
National Press Club that he will be prime minister in a few short weeks. The incumbent
PM, Yoshihiko Noda of the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) seemed strangely
passive, befitting a leader who knows that he faces ignominious defeat and
can’t do much about it.
Conservatism is somewhat different in Japan than it is in
other countries, such as the United States. It is not defined, as it often is
in U.S., by opposition to tax increases (indeed, the LDP provided the votes to
pass a doubling of the national sales tax last summer).
No, the term in Japan usually refers to a more nationalistic
diplomacy, revisions to the pacifistic constitution with its war-renouncing Article
9, more defense spending and a stronger position on territorial disputes, such
as over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands. Abe strongly supports all of these issues.
The LDP election platform is tailor-made to Abe’s hawkish
views. It proposes to:
- Soften or eliminate the
war-renouncing Article 9 of Japan’s Constitution.
- Interpret the existing
clause to permit Japan to engage in “collective self-defense”.
- Elevate the status of the
Self-Defense forces to that of a National Defense Force
Not specifically enumerated in the platform are other
conservative priorities, such a resuming official visits to the Yasukuni
shrine, dropping or revising the 1993 Kono Statement in which Japan apologized
for recruiting “comfort women” to serve soldiers during the war and reinforcing
Japan’s sovereignty over the Senkaku islands.
All of these proposals are likely to increase friction with
Japan’s Asian neighbors, especially Korea and China. Beijing in particular
opposes the official shrine visits because the Yasukuni hosts spirits of 14
convicted “Class A” war criminals.
It seems as if Abe has just stepped out of his one-year of as
prime minister five years ago (2006-2007) where among his accomplishments was he
elevated the defense agency to that of a fully-fledged Defense Ministry with a
seat at the cabinet. He was also the first Japanese premier to visit NATO
headquarters in Brussels.
During the debate, Abe hedged on whether he would resume the
Yasukuni Shrine visits, although he said he regretted that he had avoided them during
his previous tenure. His predecessor Junichiro Koizumi had sent Sino-Japanese
relations into the deep freeze by making official visits; Abe discontinued them
to repair diplomatic ties.
On the sensitive Senkaku issue Abe favors erecting some kind
of fishermen’s shelter on one of the islands, staffed with civil servants.
There is no great clamor among actual fishermen for such a port of refuge. It
is merely an excuse to raise the rising sun flag on the Senkaku.
Changing the constitution is formidable task, requiring
two-thirds affirmative votes in both houses of parliament and a national
referendum. Conservative objections to the charter come not just from some of
its specific provisions but also simply from the fact that it was written by
Americans while they were occupying Japan .
Abe noted that before the DPJ took power, no foreign head of
state had set foot on any of the islands that Japan claims. Two years ago
Russia’s then president Dmitry Medvedev visited one of the southern Kurile
islands, and this year South Korea’s president Lee Myong-bak set foot on the
Dokdo/Takeshima island. Abe said this showed the weakness of the current
government,
On these kinds of conservative issues, Abe is essentially in
tune with the new “third force” Japan Restoration Party (JRP) founded by Osaka
Mayor Toru Hashimoto and now officially led by former Tokyo governor Shintaro
Ishihara, who is even more conservative on these issues than Abe.
It is widely assumed that the LDP and its long-time
coalition partner New Komeito will form a coalition with Hashimoto’s group,
although, ironically, Komeito, differs considerably on the constitutional issues
that now seem to animate the current LDP. That probably won’t break the
long-time alliance.
Considering that the major contenders are center right (DPJ)
right (JRP) and farther right (LDP), there was an obvious opening for a
leftwing party; leave it to political dealmaker and organizer extraordinaire,
Ichiro Ozawa, to recognize this and move in to fill the vacuum.
Ozawa dropped out of the news after he bolted the DPJ last
summer over the issue of raising the national sales tax, taking about 35 MPs
with him. He founded a new entity called Peoples’ Lives First Party. At the
time it was thought to be a desperate move of DPJ members of parliament worried
they would lose their seats and hoping that Ozawa could save them.
He was doing what he does best, working behind the scenes,
in this case cultivating an alliance with the governor of Shiga prefecture in
western Japan, Yukiko Kada, who announced last week that she was forming an
avowedly anti-nuclear power party, the Japan of the Future Party, tapping into
post-Fukushima angst over nuclear power.
Ozawa immediately disbanded his party and merged it with
Kada, giving the fledgling political group, some political heft three weeks
before the voting takes place. It also creates a challenger to Hashimoto’s
Osaka based Restoration Party as the “third force” in the coming election.
It remains to be seen how many of Abe’s nationalist notions
he can turn into actual accomplishments. The Senkaku fracus that began last
summer and continues to percolate, raises some anxiety over national security
and a rising China, but there is hardly a groundswell of popular pressure for
most of the things Abe wants.
He may find, as he did during his first time as prime
minister, that the Japanese public is still more concerned with bread and
butter livelihood issues than it is about changing the constitution. It is not
for nothing that the wily Ozawa named his new and now disbanded party Peoples’
Lives First.
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