Long Hot Summer
During his spring visit to the United States, Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe stood in the well of the House of Representatives and promised: “I will pass national security legislation by the end of summer.”
He was
referring to a new law and amendments to nearly a dozen other laws relating to
the deployment of the Self-Defense Forces (SDF). They would provide legislative
mussel to the Abe cabinet’s decision one year ago to “reinterpret” the
pacifistic constitution to permit collective defense.
At the
time it seemed, especially to Washington which welcomed the return of the
conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and Abe back to power, that
fulfilling this promise would present few difficulties. After all, the LDP and
its Komeito coalition partner hold commanding majorities in both houses of parliament.
Washington
was so sure of Abe’s legislative clout that it agreed to publish new joint
guidelines for joint U.S.-Japan cooperation in defense matters even before
parliament voted on the on the amendments that are needed to implement the
agreement.
Now there
are increasing signs that parliamentary approval of the measures this summer
isn’t going to be a cake walk. Public opinion polls show growing numbers of
Japanese opposing the new security laws, while the cabinet’s approval ratings,
now about 40 percent, are beginning to fall.
In one
sign that the government is getting worried, the prime minister extended the current
session of the Diet, which was due to adjourn this month for the summer
holidays, until the end of September. It is the longest extension since the end
of World War II.
The tide
began to turn in early May when three constitutional scholars testified before
a parliamentary committee that the proposed laws were unconstitutional. It took
on added force as one of the three had been appointed by the government. The
media played up their views.
Then the
government was embarrassed when some of the younger members held a “study
session” in which they debated ways to punish the press over their editorials
and coverage of the security bills and other defense-related measures. One of
those asked to speak was novelist Naoki Hyakuta, an extreme reactionary who
said some of the unfriendly newspapers in Okinawa “must be destroyed.”
Hayakuta
is not a member of parliament but served on the governing board of NHK, Japan’s
state broadcaster, as an Abe appointee. The prime minister, who did not attend
the meeting was forced to formally apologize, “It was extremely inappropriate,”
Abe said referring to the language used by those attending.
One more
fumble like that could be fatal to the bills, says party secretary general
Sadakazu Tanigake.
What’s
emerging is a potentially fatal combination of a difficult-to-explain security
need and a prime minister who is not trusted, either at home or abroad, on
matters of history. He harbors revisionist views on Japan’s role in World War
II, which makes it seem to some that he is eager to launch 1930s-type adventures.
Never mind
that the actual legislation is fairly modest in practice. Mostly it is designed
to enable closer cooperation with existing allies like the United States and
potential allies like the Philippines in situations that threaten the Japan’s
security.
The
situation is beginning to look eerily like the 1960 when the then Prime Minister
Nobusuke Kishi, who happens to be Abe’s grandfather and in many respects his
role model, rammed through parliament the security treaty with the US in the
face of massive demonstrations that forced President Dwight Eisenhower to
cancel a planned trip to Japan.Things have not yet reached that point, though there was recent a demonstration of about 45,000 people in downtown Tokyo opposing the new laws, and there may be more, especially next month when Japan will mark the 70th anniversary of the end of the war.
It is not certain whether Abe will be forced to copy the strong-armed tactics that his grandfather used to ram the treaty through the Diet in 1960 but that may change during the long hot summer. Abe’s majority looks impressive on paper, but numbers can deceive. Japanese take offense at high-handed parliamentary tactics and may punish the party in the next election for them.
There are
some signs that Abe himself isn’t so sure that he has the votes to pass the
laws. One is the unusually long extension of the current parliament through the
summer. It may show he is worried about whether the bills can pass the upper
house, and he wants time for the lower house to be able to override an upper
house defeat.
Another sign
was a curious recent meeting with Toru Hashimoto, one of the founders of the
Japan Innovation Party, which has the third-largest bloc of votes in both
houses. It suggested he may be fishing for insurance votes in that party (which
has proposed its own versions of the bills.)
So far,
there are no other indications of a revolt against the government by LDP back
benchers. Its coalition partner, Komeito, has also been quiet. Though it is
more pacifistic that its partner, it endorsed the new bills after a series of
consultations and negotiations.
But bets
could be off if the government’s public approval ratings continue to fall
during the summer. Long time Japan watcher, Takeo Toshikawa, writing in The Oriental Economist, says the cabinet’s
approval ratings may fall five percentage points each time the bills are passed
through a committee or plenary session.
If it
continues to fall steadily many of the younger LDP members, fearing for their
seats, may begin to bolt. If that happens, and especially if the government has
to pull the bills, Abe might find opposition to his reelection as party
president in September, a prerequisite for being premier, where he previously
was considered a shoo-in.
In that
case Abe may have to take another lead from his distinguished grandfather, who
was forced to resign as prime minister after the 1960 security treaty debacle.
Todd Crowell is the author of The Coming War Between China and Japan, Amazon Singles
Todd Crowell is the author of The Coming War Between China and Japan, Amazon Singles