Embattled Kishida ousts LDP's most powerful faction from Cabinet
TOKYO, Dec. 14 Kyodo - Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Thursday replaced all four ministers belonging to the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's most powerful faction as he makes a desperate bid to fend off criticism of his government's handling of a political fundraising scandal.
Kishida moved to install lawmakers with ministerial experience in his Cabinet as he looks to steady the ship, but the expulsion of all members belonging to the party's largest faction is set to create tensions within the LDP as the group has supported his administration, political pundits said.
The LDP has faced criticism amid allegations that the faction, formerly led by slain Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, failed to declare hundreds of millions of yen of fundraising party revenue in political funding reports in an apparent attempt to create secret slush funds.
The mass resignations leave the LDP in the very unusual situation of having no representatives from the party's biggest faction within the Cabinet.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno was replaced by former Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi, a member of the fourth largest faction within the LDP, government officials said.
Economy minister Yasutoshi Nishimura, farm minister Ichiro Miyashita and internal affairs minister Junji Suzuki, also stepped down.
Five senior vice ministers and a parliamentary vice minister belonging to Abe's group also gave up their posts in Kishida's government, which has seen its approval ratings plummet to their lowest levels since he took office in October 2021.
Matsuno, who served as the secretary general of the biggest faction for two years through 2021, is suspected of failing to report more than 10 million yen ($70,000) in income earned from the group's fundraising events, investigative sources said.
Nishimura succeeded Matsuno as secretary general, a position widely viewed as having knowledge of the flow of money, and the incumbent is LDP Diet affairs chief Tsuyoshi Takagi, who has also said he will resign from his party post.
Former Justice Minister Ken Saito was tapped as economy minister and Tetsushi Sakamoto, former minister in charge of regional revitalization, was named as farm minister, while Takeaki Matsumoto was reinstated as internal affairs minister after losing the role in the last Cabinet reshuffle.
The political funds scandal emerged following a criminal complaint alleging five LDP factions, including Kishida's group, underreported revenue from political fundraising parties.
LDP factions have traditionally set quotas for lawmakers on the sale of party tickets, usually priced at 20,000 yen. In some groups, if they surpass their targets, the extra funds are passed back to them as a type of commission.
Prosecutors are looking into a possible violation of the political funds control law as Abe's faction allegedly reimbursed members with part of party revenue from ticket sales amounting to around 500 million yen over a five-year period through 2022, the investigative sources said.
The prosecutors are considering questioning the lawmakers as the extraordinary parliamentary session ended on Wednesday, the sources said. Abe headed the faction until he was assassinated during an election campaign speech in July 2022.
In announcing his resignation at his last regular press conference, former top government spokesman Matsuno said he will scrutinize his own political organization and fulfill his accountability "at an appropriate time."
Former economy minister Nishimura told reporters that he regretted he had to step down "midway" but decided to quit to "avoid stalling policies," pledging to follow instructions by investigative authorities on the issue.
==Kyodo