Japan's ruling LDP-Komeito coalition retains majority of lower house seats
TOKYO, (Xinhua) : Japan's ruling coalition of
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and Komeito has retained a comfortable majority
of the lower house seats following Sunday's general election, according to
final results early Monday morning.
Led by Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, the LDP secured 261
seats, taking a majority of the 465-seat lower house on its own, with its
partner Komeito occupying 32 seats.
A majority of seats in the powerful chamber of parliament
enables the ruling bloc to effectively control all standing committees and
steer the legislative process.
The LDP, which previously held 276 seats on its own before
the general election, lost some seats to opposition parties, reflecting that
the prime minister may have failed to win strong support for his COVID-19,
economic and national security policies.
Kishida, who has said he will claim victory if the ruling
coalition retains a majority, said on Sunday evening that the outcome gives him
"a valuable public mandate" to govern.
Regarding the LDP's loss of seats, Kishida said that he will
"analyze the results and firmly accept them."
The ruling party also suffered a number of high-profile
losses. According to Kyodo reports, Akira Amari, the LDP's secretary general,
intends to resign from his post following his loss in his single-seat
constituency in the general election.
The LDP's No.2 conveyed his intention to resign to other
party executives following media projections that he had lost in his
constituency.
The general election was the first major test for Kishida
since he took office on Oct. 4. The new prime minister has pledged to stimulate
economic growth while redistributing more economic benefits to the middle class
under his vision of "new capitalism."
Kishida has also said the government will propose a stimulus
package within the year to support people and businesses stricken by the
pandemic.
The opposition party leaders said on Sunday that their
strategy of coordinating candidates to counter the ruling bloc bore fruit in
the lower house election, though the main opposition Constitutional Democratic
Party of Japan (CDPJ) secured only 96 seats, falling short of the 110 seats it
held before.
Five opposition parties -- the CDPJ, the Democratic Party
for the People, the Japanese Communist Party, the Social Democratic Party and
Reiwa Shinsengumi -- backed the same candidates in over 70 percent of the 289
constituency contests.
They have claimed that the government has failed its task of
COVID-19 response and that the Abenomics policy upheld by the ruling LDP
widened the country's wealth gap as the policy only promoted corporate earnings
and share prices but failed to achieve higher wages.
The opposition parties have called for lowering the
consumption tax to take off some pressure on low- and middle-class households,
allow married couples to take different surnames and recognize same-sex
marriage.
Voting of the country's general election finished on Sunday
evening with polling stations closing nationwide at 8 p.m. local time, and
ballots counting finished on early Monday morning. Enditem
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