Suga’s LDP could fall short in Tokyo local election as Olympics looms

FAN Editor
Newly installed Olympic rings for celebrating the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games in Yokohama
FILE PHOTO: A jogger runs past a newly installed Olympic rings for celebrating the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games in Yokohama, Japan, June 30, 2021. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

July 4, 2021

By Kiyoshi Takenaka and Hideyuki Sano

TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan’s Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and allies are unlikely to win outright a local election in Tokyo on Sunday seen as a key test of voter sentiment ahead of national polls later this year, public broadcaster NHK said.

A disappointing result could put pressure on Suga, whose term as LDP president expires at the end of September. The head of the LDP is virtually assured of being prime minister, given the party’s large majority in parliament.

NHK quoted Taimei Yamaguchi, chair of the LDP’s election strategy committee, as saying said his party and its junior coalition partner Komeito looked set to fall short of an outright majority in Tokyo’s assembly.

“It appears our seats are likely to be a little bit lower than what we have initially anticipated,” Yamaguchi said.

Tokyo’s election comes as the capital is preparing to host the Olympic Games whilst dealing with a resurgence of COVID-19.

With a general election due by October, Suga has staked his political career on successfully holding the Games, postponed from last year due to the virus, and boosting vaccine rollouts.

He has said he will bar spectators if necessary. But exit polls by broadcaster TBS showed 57% of respondents were still opposed to the Olympics going ahead on July 23 as planned.

The Tokyo Citizens First party of Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike wants the Olympics held without spectators while the opposition Constitutional Democrats and Communists have called for the Games to be cancelled or postponed.

A resurgence of the pandemic in Japan has seen new COVID-19 infections in Tokyo rise to a more than five-week high, with 716 reported on Saturday.

Voters on Sunday said COVID-19 remained their chief concern.

“My focus on this election was the pandemic measures,” a 26-year-old actor, who is deaf, wrote in a note to a reporter outside the polling station. He asked not to be named.

“I picked the candidate who would take actions to save infected people, as I am afraid of losing my job and my income if I get infected,” he said, declining to name the candidate. “I don’t care about political parties.”

Another voter was critical of the LDP’s handling of the pandemic.

“I wanted to give my vote to someone in the opposition as I don’t support the current (national) government,” said Noriko Ushimaru, a woman in her 80s. “They are hopeless in coronavirus responses. I don’t see their determination to curb the virus.”

She said the holding the Tokyo Olympics amid the pandemic and vaccine supply shortages were examples of the government’s inadequate anti-coronavirus measures.

(Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Additional reporting by Yuka Obayashi and Hideyuki Sano; Editing by Clarence Fernandez, William Mallard, Elaine Hardcastle and Catherine Evans)

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