Tatiana Maria
Majesty
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2013
- Messages
- 7,162
- City
- St Petersburg
- Country
- United States
https://politiken.dk/udland/art6397...s-premierminister-ud-på-den-politiske-mødding
The very national-conservative PM Shinzo Abe is in trouble!
He has been involved in a number of scandals as well as being sidelined foreign politically by USA in regards to North Korea - not to mention that he is very unpopular in Japan's neighboring countries!
As such he general standing combined with his party dropping significantly in the opinion polls suggests that he may not survive his party's general assembly in the autumn this year. - Even though he is a very skilled survivor, there are limits to how many lives a cat has...
My guess is that Abe survives, but if he does not run for a third term, the favored candidate to win the party's leadership election is Fumio Kishida, a member of the same ultranationalist group as Abe (Nippon Kaigi).
How may that influence the abdication?
IMO there can be two ways:
A) The national-conservative government is too busy with political infighting and in establishing the authority of a very possible new leader, that the government prefer to have the whole abdication issue over and done with as soon as possible, preferably yesterday.
The abdication should run as smoothly as possibly - which means there is a good chance the court can negotiate a better deal than otherwise, simply because the government top is distracted.
B) The national conservative government see the abdication and proclaiming a new emperor as a most welcome distraction - that should be celebrated in as patriotic spirit as possible, with all the traditional national Japanese virtues going full throttle.
Both (A) and (B) would seem to be prudent approaches for the government to take. It would be interesting to see if the court would wish to negotiate; I'm not sure whether to believe the IHA's claims that both the emperor and the government desire that the abdication be kept low-key.
But many things also depends on who will take over, and what fractions will support the new PM.
A new PM needs to change course in order to get their voters back and hopefully attract more. And this is where the question of female succession may come in through the side door. Simply by appealing to women and especially young women as segment worth cultivating. - After all a considerable segment of the core voters of the national conservative government is dying out - literally. Even if man of them are very influential indeed, the Grim Reaper gets them eventually.
If Shinzo Abe continues it will be from a markedly weaker position.
Abe and his party in fact run stronger with younger voters than older voters.
Do the young lean right? Mainichi polls show strong youth support for Abe, LDP - The Mainichi
In the first poll, roughly 40 percent of those over 70 and in their 40s, and less than 40 percent of respondents in other age groups said they supported the Cabinet. Meanwhile, nearly half of teen voters and those in their 20s said they backed the Abe administration. In the second poll as well, roughly 40 percent of teens and people in their 20s and 30s supported the Cabinet, as compared to less than 40 percent of those aged 40-plus.
The LDP's approval rate was also highest among teens and those in their 20s, standing at nearly 40 percent in the first survey and around 30 percent in the second. This stood out from the less than 30 percent in the first and roughly 30 percent in the second survey among those aged 30 to 69.
No matter who Abe's ultimate successor may be, the likelihood that the succession and membership laws will be overhauled anytime soon is low, in my opinion.
1) It would not pay political dividends: Opposition to female succession and branches is important to nationalist-conservative voters, while imperial issues do not play an important role in the behavior of any other voter group.
2) In the years to come, Fumihito and Kiko will be the Crown Prince and Crown Princess, Hisahito will be a teenager raised in the position of future emperor, and Aiko will be at university educating herself to earn her own living as a likely future commoner. By that time, applying gender-neutral rules would have a strong impact on the imperial family, commensurate with the reintroduction of female succession in Denmark in 1953 (which was similar insofar as it displaced a man in his fifties and a teenage boy who were considered future kings, though Aiko would be much older than Margrethe was when she became the heiress to the throne).
Last edited: