Africa | America | Asia | Australasia | Europe | India | Middle East | UK | US

Japan sees historic political change with new government - Summary

Posted : Wed, 16 Sep 2009 13:32:29 GMT
By : DPA
Category : Asia (World)
News Alerts by Email ( click here )
Asia World News | Home
Tokyo - One-time opposition leader Yukio Hatoyama was elected Japan's prime minister Wednesday by parliament, ushering in a sea change in Japanese politics. Both chambers of the Diet selected the 62-year-old self-proclaimed reformer after his Democratic Party of Japan won a landslide victory in August 30 parliamentary elections, trouncing the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which had governed nearly uninterrupted for more than 50 years.

The untested Hatoyama faces an uphill battle trying to implement his reform agenda, while admitting that this cabinet lacks goverment experience.

"We are plunging into a world of which we have no experience," he said at his first news conference as prime minister.

"We may make mistakes as we do things by trial and error. We want the people to be tolerant ... We would appreciate if the people nurture the new government with patience," Hatoyama said.

As expected, Hatoyama named former DPJ secretary general Katsya Okada to head the Foreign Affairs Ministry. Okada, a stern-looking former bureaucrat in the trade ministry, is regarded as well-versed in party politics but lacks experience in international diplomacy.

The principled 56-year-old with a squeaky-clean reputation is also regarded as a possible successor of Hatoyama.

Naoto Kan was named deputy prime minister and minister of strategy. The co-founder and former leader of the DPJ is spearheading the party's ambitious plans to end the powerful bureaucracy's sway over politics.

Kan is to lead the government's new National Stategy Bureau, which is to wrest control over budget planning and day-to-day politics from the bureaucrats.

The former health minister is regarded as the right man for the job. During his tenure, he picked a fight with the bureaucracy in 1996 over a scandal involving HIV-tainted blood products.

The Finance Ministry will now be headed by Hirohisa Fujii, 77. A seasoned official in the ministry, Fujii is a close ally of DPJ secretary general Ichiro Ozawa, the driving force behind the party.

Ozawa is regarded as the mastermind behind the DPJ's election win.

Masayuki Naoshima, a former high-level functionary of Toyota's in-house trade union was named minister for trade and industry.

Hatoyama's cabinet faces a difficult road ahead as Japan seeks to emerge from its worst recession in the postwar era. The DPJ - which was founded in 1998 by LDP defectors, social democrats and former union leaders - has no experience in governing but must cooperate with the powerful bureaucracy, which ruled Japan hand-in-hand with the LDP.

Hatoyama's rise to the highest office in the land came after his DPJ secured a majority of 308 seats in the 480-member House of Representatives, the lower but more powerful chamber of the Diet, in last month's election. It had already won a majority with its coalition partners in the House of Councillors in 2007 elections.

The win pushed the LDP out of office after it had governed for all but 10 months since 1955.

The DPJ's win came from intense public discontent with the LDP and prime minister Taro Aso's government, its handling of the recession, its perceived weakness, a series of scandals that rocked the party and its failure to address domestic concerns, such as Japan's strained pension system and its ageing, shrinking population.

Hatoyama has set his priorities as wresting influence for politicians away from the bureaucracy and revitalizing the world's second-largest economy.

"It is time to make politics which is not controlled by bureaucrats," Hatoyama said.

He said he plans to do that by increasing household incomes, encouraging spending and cutting LDP outlays he considers wasteful. Those spending cuts, he said, would pay for his new measures and avoid imposing a burden on citizens to pay back the national debt, which, at about 800 trillion yen (8.5 trillion dollars), exceeds 160 per cent of the nation's gross domestic product.

"There are questions about how to finance those policies ... I think we can say that securing enough funds is in sight. We will have enough at least for the first year," he said.

He has also pledged to make cuts in Japan's emissions of greenhouse gases amounting to 25 per cent from 1990's levels by 2020, to be realized by new Envionment Minister Sakihito Ozawa.

Hatoyama's cabinet includes members of his coalition partners, the Social Democratic Party and the People's New Party.

The new prime minister said he would take his time to review the country's long-standing security alliance with the United States, as demanded by his coalition partners. Demands by the Social Democrats for cuts in the numbers of US troops stationed on the island of Okinawa are set to cool down relations with Washington, observers believe.

Copyright DPA

Share/Save/Bookmark

Article : Japan sees historic political change with new government - Summary
Print this article
Email this article

Stay Updated
News gadget on your Google homepage
Subscribe to a news feed in Google Reader


Related News

China coal mine explosion: 42 dead, 66 trapped - Summary
Beijing - The death toll following a gas explosion at a coal mine in north-eastern China that killed 42 workers and left 66 miners trapped underground on Saturday was expected to rise, local media reported. The explosion occurred at 2:30 am in the Xi...

Rocket hits luxury hotel in Afghan capital - Summary
Kabul - A rocket hit the perimeter wall of a luxury hotel in the Afghan capital Kabul on Saturday, police and witnesses said. The southern wall of the luxury Serena Hotel compound was destroyed in the attack, Kabul police chief Abdul Rahman said, but...

Rocket hits luxury hotel in Afghan capital - Update
Kabul (dap) - A rocket hit the perimeter wall of a luxury hotel in the Afghan capital Kabul on Saturday, police and witnesses said. The southern wall of the luxury Serena Hotel compound was destroyed in the attack, Kabul police chief Abdul Rahman sai...

Large explosion near hotel in Afghan capital
Kabul (dap) - A large explosion rocked the Afghan capital Kabul on Saturday evening, police and witnesses said. The blast occurred in the vicinity of the city's only five-star hotel, the Serena Hotel. ...

Afghan security chiefs unveil plan to boost force level
Kabul - Top Afghan security chiefs on Saturday unveiled a plan, drafted by NATO's top commander in Afghanistan, to boost country's police and troop strength to 400,000, double the size of its previous goal. Afghan Defence Minister Abdul Rahim Wardak ...

Kunduz airstrike relatives to demand compensation - Summary
Berlin - Dozens of relatives of people killed in a controversial NATO airstrike in Afghanistan are to attempt to claim compensation from the German government, it emerged Saturday. Karim Popal, a lawyer, said in an interview with the Weser-Kurier new...

Six Pakistani troops, 14 Taliban killed in clashes - Summary
Islamabad - At least 14 militants and six soldiers, were killed Saturday in the latest fighting in the ongoing military operation in Pakistan's restive north-western tribal region, the army said. Nearly 30,000 troops supported by air power and log-ra...

Have your Say
Name
Email
Subject
Your Comment

Enter Verification code
 
  

 

 

More Asia (World) News click here
Follow The Earth Times
Subscribe to RSS Follow Earth Times on TwitterNews by email
Share/Save/Bookmark

 
 



 
Subscribe to free Earthtimes
News Alerts by Email Click here
For RSS Feeds Click here
or Create your own RSS

Add to Google Toolbar
Breaking News
Press Releases

 


The Earth Times
News Category

© 2009 www.earthtimes.org, The Earth Times, All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy
Earth Times accept no responsibility or liability either directly or indirectly for views or opinions expressed in articles or comments.