ID :
69262
Mon, 07/06/2009 - 10:30
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://oananews.org//node/69262
The shortlink copeid
DPJ-backed Kawakatsu wins Shizuoka election, dealing blow to Aso+
SHIZUOKA, Japan, July 6 Kyodo -
A Democratic Party of Japan-backed candidate won Sunday's gubernatorial
election in Shizuoka, seeing off his main rival backed by the ruling coalition
and dealing a further blow to Prime Minister Taro Aso ahead of the looming
general election.
Heita Kawakatsu, 60, backed by the main opposition DPJ, the Social Democratic
Party and the People's New Party, won a close contest, defeating Yukiko
Sakamoto, 60, who was endorsed by the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and its
coalition partner, the New Komeito party, independent Toru Unno, 60, and the
Japanese Communist Party's Sadayoshi Hirano, 59, according to the election
returns.
It is the fourth consecutive victory by a DPJ-backed candidate against an
LDP-supported one in local elections, following mayoral polls in Nagoya,
Saitama and Chiba.
The voter turnout was 61.06 percent, up 16.57 percentage points from the
previous gubernatorial election. Kawakatsu garnered 728,706 votes, while
713,654 ballots went to Sakamoto, 332,952 to Unno and 65,669 to Hirano, with
all votes counted.
''I will devote myself to work so that every single (Shizuoka) person will be
happy,'' said Kawakatsu after winning.
The victory by Kawakatsu in the latest race, widely seen as a bellwether for
the House of Representatives election, will give added impetus to the DPJ at a
time when Aso has been steadily losing support.
While Aso is considering dissolving the lower house immediately after the July
12 Tokyo assembly election, the defeat in Shizuoka will further damage his
reputation and calls may grow within the LDP that he should step down if the
ruling coalition fails to secure the majority in the Tokyo election, political
observers said.
Many in the ruling coalition were pessimistic after the result, with a senior
LDP lawmaker blaming Aso for having ''a negative effect'' on the election and a
New Komeito party executive worrying that it ''would affect the Tokyo assembly
election.''
But Chief Cabinet Secretary Takeo Kawamura denied it would have any influence
on national politics. While calling the result ''disappointing,'' he said,
''From the very start, we considered it as just another local election separate
from national politics.''
Kawakatsu, who was also supported by the Shizuoka branch of the Japanese Trade
Union Confederation, or Rengo, in his first challenge for an elected public
position, successfully attracted unaffiliated voters who are critical of the
ruling coalition and want a change of government at a national level.
The DPJ continuously sent senior officials, including party leader Yukio
Hatoyama, to campaign for Kawakatsu and call for a ''change of government'' at
the national level, starting with Shizuoka.
By contrast, ruling coalition-backed Sakamoto was affected by problems
involving the LDP, in which Aso's influence is declining, although she played
on her wealth of administrative experience as a bureaucrat at the Health, Labor
and Welfare Ministry and as deputy governor of Shizuoka.
Sakamoto was also supported by former Gov. Yoshinobu Ishikawa, but could not
conduct her election campaign with full backing because some LDP prefectural
assembly members favored Kawakatsu.
Kawakatsu, a former head of Shizuoka University of Art and Culture, is an
economics scholar, who was also involved in an education reform panel under
former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
==Kyodo