- 2021-10-04 06:11:49
- LAST MODIFIED: 2024-11-24 06:03:27
Fumio Kishida becomes Prime Minister in Japan
Photo NHK Japan:
International Desk: Dhaka, Oct-04,
Japan's parliament on
Monday voted Fumio Kishida the country's next prime minister, with the new
leader expected to announce a cabinet including both holdovers and fresh faces.
The soft-spoken scion
of a Hiroshima political family, Kishida beat popular vaccine chief Taro Kono
to win leadership of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party last week.
He easily won a vote
Monday in parliament's lower house, where the LDP's ruling coalition holds a
commanding majority, taking 311 votes to the 124 for opposition leader Yukio
Edano.
"This chamber
names Mr. Fumio Kishida as the prime minister," lower house speaker
Tadamori Oshima declared after the vote.
The upper house will
also vote but the lower house holds sway on the decision. The upper house also
approved him in a vote shortly afterwards.
Kishida bowed to his
fellow lawmakers after the vote, but did not immediately speak. Earlier, he
told reporters he was ready for the top job.
"I think it will
be a new start in its true sense," he said.
"I want to take on
challenges with a strong will and firm resolve to face the future."
Kishida is widely
considered a safe pair of hands, who commands support from his own faction
within the LDP and is not expected to veer significantly from the government's
existing policies.
His election came after
former Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, who submitted his resignation on Monday
morning, announced he would not stand for the LDP leadership after just one
year in office.
Kishida will unveil his
new cabinet shortly, but details reported in local media suggested he would
keep on several ministers in key portfolios.
Both Foreign Minister
Toshimitsu Motegi and Defence Minister Nobuo Kishi will retain their jobs,
local media reported.
Motegi is a
Harvard-educated political veteran who has taken the lead in negotiating key
trade deals, while Kishi is the brother of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
The finance portfolio
will go to Shunichi Suzuki, who is replacing his own brother-in-law Taro Aso.
Suzuki, 68, is also a
veteran politician and the son of a former prime minister. He has served in
government before, holding both the Olympic minister and environment minister
posts.
- Pandemic recovery,
election ahead -
The cabinet will
reportedly include three women, among them his one-time rival for the
leadership Seiko Noda, who will become minister in charge of addressing Japan's
declining birthrate.
The posts of vaccine
minister and digital minister will also be held by women, with several members
of the cabinet appointed to their first ministerial post.
"The Kishida
cabinet aims at balance with consideration given to major factions, young
lawmakers, and neighbouring countries," wrote Junichi Makino, SMBC Nikko
securities chief economist, in a note.
"It's the kind of
cabinet formation that reflects Kishida, who works not to make enemies."
He faces a raft of
challenges, from trying to steer a post-pandemic economic recovery to
confronting the military threats posed by North Korea and China.
He will also be leading
the LDP in general elections that must happen by November.
Local media reported
Monday that Kishida is now expected to hold the vote on October 31, a few weeks
earlier than expected.
The ruling party and
its coalition party are widely expected to retain power, but could be
vulnerable to losing some seats with the public unhappy about the government's
response to the coronavirus.
Suga's government saw
its approval ratings slump as it struggled to tackle waves of infection,
including a record virus spike over the summer while the Olympics were being
held.
Kishida's leadership
campaign emphasised his plans to correct government missteps on the pandemic,
including a pledge to unleash new economic stimulus. Much of Japan has been
under virus emergency measures for a large part of the year, with the
restrictions finally lifting last week as new infections decline.
Around 60 percent of
the population is now vaccinated, but there are concerns that the country's
healthcare system could easily become overwhelmed again in a new virus wave.
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