Categories: World

Japan PM Coalition Kishida to keep the majority but losing seats

Tokyo: The coalition of Japanese Prime Minister Fumi Kishida is expected to make a majority in the election of the Sunday parliament but will lose a few seats in setbacks for weeks old weeks wrestling with battered economics Coronavirus and regional security challenges, according to the poll coming out.
The Liberal Democratic Party of Kishida and the Junior Coalition partner Komeito together is expected to win between 239 and 288 seats at home under 465 members, the stronger from the Japanese two-room diet, the Public Broadcaster NHK polls showed.
LDP only expected to win 212-253 seats, with KomeIto get 27-35 seats, according to the projection.
Their combined seats will exceed the majority of parliamenters 233 – losses from 305 seats before.
Kishida, 64, was elected by the Prime Minister on October 4 after winning a leadership race in the ruling party, and dissolved houses down only 10 days after serving.
Party conservative leaders saw Him as a secure status-quo substitute for Yoshihide Suga and its influential predecessor Shinzo Abe.
Polling out more or less in line with media predictions.
Whether the Kishida party itself can maintain the majority, and how many seats will be lost from 276 before the election, it is still unclear.
Official results are expected on Monday morning.
Kishida’s direct task was to get support for a party that was weakened by the Suga approach felt by the steps of the pandemic and his insistence on holding the Tokyo summer Olympics despite expanding opposition because of the high number of corrodaovirus cases, which had fallen sharply.
Kishida repeatedly emphasized his determination to listen to people and overcome criticism that the leadership of the nine-year-only year has committed corruption, tame the opposite bureaucrat.
This campaign is mostly centered on the steps of the Covid-19 response and revitalizes the economy.
While the ruling party emphasized the importance of having a stronger military amid fears of the influence of China and the threat of North Korean nuclear and nuclear and nuclear, opposition parties focused on diversity and encouraging gender equality.
Opposition leaders complain that the LDP government has recently expanded the gap between rich and poor, does not support the economy during the initiative of equality and pandemic gender diversity and traffic jams.
Japan this year is ranked 120 in the gender-gap-gap world economic forum.
The opposition has long struggled to win enough votes to form a government after a brief government of the middle-center democratic party which has now died in Japan in 2009-2012, because they could not present a big vision for the country.
In the economy, Kishida has emphasized growth by increasing income, while opposition groups focus more on wealth redistribution and call for cash payments to low-income households pandemic.
Kishida, in his last speech on Saturday in Tokyo, promised to spur growth and “distribute his fruit” to people as income.
“For you to decide who can do it responsibly.” LDP opposes the law that guarantees equality for sexual minorities and allows a separate family name for married couples.
Of the 1,051 candidates, only 17 percent were women, despite the 2018 law which promoted gender equality in elections, which were not noisy because there was no penalty.
Women accounce about 10 percent of parliament, the situation of gender rights experts calls “democracy without women.” Voters, including young couples with small children, began to arrive at the polling station in the center of Tokyo in the morning.
Shinji Asada, 44, said he compared Covid-19 steps to choose a candidate, hoping for leadership changes, because he thought the powerful party had no explanation and transparency on the steps of the pandemic.
He said that despite the promise of Kishida to pay more attention to the voice of the people, “I thought nothing would change (underneath) after seeing the cabinet,” most of the posts went to party factions that chose it.
Part 50 years -Time worker, Kana Kasai, said she chose someone she thought would “work with bones” for a better future.

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