The
Abe administration has gone into negative territory in the latest polls, but
those same polls indicate a massive coalition victory. That says it all. But
what does it mean? PM Abe becomes even more appreciative of the
Komeito/Sokagakkai handicap, that’s what it means. The policy changes will be marginal,
a little more give on social spending and consumption tax exemptions and
bending on national security. But it will put to rest any thoughts from the likes
of Yoshimi Watanabe and his now-defunct Your Party or the octogenarian Party
for Future Generations to replace Komeito in the ruling coalition.
Looking
ahead, the coalition needs to win 316—including the nominally independent lower
house president’s seat as well as Fukuoka District 1, where two LDP party members will be duking
it out as independents in what is the single most exciting (exciting, that
is, if you are a borderline-insane Japan election otaku) race to settle a two-generation feud between two LDP local
powers—of the 475 lower house seats, a supermajority for the day if and when it
loses the 2016 triennial election for half of the upper house and the simple
majority that it holds there. The upper house is structured to give any
opposition better odds than the upper house, an edge that is likely to be heightened
under new rules that will be in place by then to comply with Supreme Court
pressure. With Abe on target to gain a new 3-year term as LDP president next
year, it is likely that the collation will be going into the next lower house
general election under the Abe administration. If support for the Abe
administration languishes and the
DPJ, the Innovation Party, and any other bandwaggoners get their act together
by then, the coalition can easily lose its upper house majority. It’ll be ugly
enough needing a lower house override to pass must-pass legislation. Without the
supermajority, it’s going to be good-bye Abenomics, hello Abebama-Lite, in a
very twisted Diet.
3 comments:
The story of what is going on in Fukuoka District is interesting indeed. Does this mean the DPJ candidate has a chance now that LDP vote will be split? He will need YP votes to pull this off but a former YP guy seems to be running too and might capture a good share of the YP vote base. If so a very good chance for the DPJ to steal a seat will be lost.
BTW, I think something similar is taking place in Hyōgo 12th district. A former DPJ MP that seems to have defected to LDP, kinda, is running as a pro-LDP independent against another LDP guy running as an independent.
The Fukuoka 1 shootout did give the DPJ candidate a fighting chance to sneak in on the zombie (regional proportional district) list, a chance that the ex-YP independent probably spoiled.
Hyogo 12 is particularly weird because the pro-China Chairman of the LDP General Council successfully backed the ex-DPJ independent, a harsh Abe critic during the first Abe administration, against the independent candidate who received the formal support of the prefectural LDP Chapter (which normally receives rubber-stamp endorsement from the national LDP). Gives a new meaning to the old adage (what adage isn’t?) “All politics is local.”
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