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Japan conservatives win election: broadcasters

KuTuu

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
20121216192223_reuters_ldp_zpsac53fce6.jpg


AFP
Sunday, Dec 16, 2012


TOKYO - Japan's conservative Liberal Democratic Party looked to have secured a convincing majority in Sunday's general election, broadcasters said.

NHK, citing forecasts based on its own exit polls, said the LDP was likely to win 275 to 310 seats in the 480-seat lower house against 55 to 77 seats to be secured by Yoshihiko Noda's Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ).

New Komeito party, LDP's coalition partner, is likely to win 27 to 35 seats, NHK said, quoting results from its own exit polls and forecasts.

That could give the pair a more than two-thirds majority in the powerful lower house, enough to override the upper house, in which no party has overall control.

"The LDP sweeps to victory; Abe administration to start," the online edition of the Nikkei newspaper said in a banner headline.

All main broadcasters were in agreement that the LDP would return to power, three years after it was booted out by voters fed up with their more than half-century of almost unbroken rule.
 

KuTuu

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Abe to appoint cabinet Dec 26

The Yomiuri Shimbun/Asia News Network
Tuesday, Dec 18, 2012

TOKYO - Liberal Democratic Party President Shinzo Abe took steps toward forming his own cabinet Monday, a day after the party won 294 seats in a landslide victory in the House of Representatives election.

The Democratic Party of Japan suffered a damaging blow Sunday, winning only 57 seats.

Abe is expected to form his second cabinet immediately upon being elected prime minister after elections in both houses at a special Diet session to be convened Dec. 26.

Nippon Ishin no Kai (Japan Restoration Party) won 54 seats, while New Komeito garnered 31 seats.

The LDP and Komeito, coalition partners when the two parties were at the helm of government before the 2009 general election, are expected to basically agree Tuesday to form a coalition government again at a meeting between Abe and Komeito leader Natsuo Yamaguchi, according to LDP sources.

Voter turnout for single-seat constituencies was 59.32 per cent, a post-World War II low.

Abe told reporters at the LDP headquarters Monday morning he was not thinking about a lineup of ministers yet.

"As we were able to win more seats than we forecast, our responsibility is quite heavy. I'm not thinking about who I'll assign as ministers yet," Abe said.

Although the LDP and Komeito together do not have a majority of seats in the House of Councillors, they now have 325 seats in the lower house, more than the 320 seats they need to pass bills by voting them through a second time if they are voted down in the upper house.

Concerning his talks with Yamaguchi, Abe said, "I'd like to put the finishing touches on policy talks [toward forming a coalition government]."

After policy coordination by working-level officials, the two parties are expected to officially agree on the coalition within this week or early next week, party sources said.

On Monday morning, senior LDP members discussed at the party headquarters how to steer the party and conduct its internal governance hereafter.

During the discussion, Abe reportedly told other members he would choose a new lineup of party executives next Tuesday.

Abe has already decided to retain LDP Secretary General Shigeru Ishiba, who contributed to the landslide victory of the party, in the post, according to sources close to him.

Abe is also thinking of appointing Prof. Koichi Hamada of Yale University as a special adviser to the cabinet for economic matters, the sources said.

He would advise Abe on measures to deal with deflation and hyper-appreciation of the yen, a subject Abe presently considers among the most important, according to the sources.

Abe is thinking of appointing Takaya Imai, director general for natural resources and energy policy at the Natural Resources and Energy Agency of the Economy, Trade and Industry Ministry as an executive secretary to the prime minister for policy affairs.

Imai served as an executive secretary to the prime minister for clerical affairs in the first Abe Cabinet of 2006 to 2007.
 
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