Japan election: Shinzo Abe and LDP in sweeping win - exit poll

 
Shinzo Abe on the campaign trail last week Shinzo Abe looks set to be reappointed as prime minister five years after he resigned

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The conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) of Shinzo Abe has won the Japanese election, exit polls predict.

The LDP, which enjoyed almost 50 years of unbroken rule until 2009, is projected to have an overall majority in the new parliament.

Mr Abe has already served a Japan's Prime Minister between 2006 and 2007.

He campaigned on a pledge to end 20 years of economic stagnation and to direct a more assertive foreign policy at a time of tensions with China.

He is seen as a hawkish, right-of-centre leader whose previous term in office ended ignominiously amid falling popularity and a resignation on grounds of ill health.

But Japanese media project big gains for his LDP who they say are on course to win between 275 to 310 seats in the 480-member house.

Its ally, the small New Komeito party, looks set to win about 30 seats to possibly give the alliance a two-thirds majority in the lower house.

That would give Mr Abe the power to over-rule parliament's upper house and help to break a deadlock that some say has plagued the world's third biggest economy since 2007.

The BBC's Rupert Wingfield Hayes says as many predicted, Japan has taken a sharp turn to the right.

The LDP Secretary-General, Shigeru Ishiba, puts the party's first rosette by a success candidate's name at party headquarters in Tokyo The LDP celebrate their first win on election night

The big losers from the election were the outgoing prime minister Yoshihiko Noda and his Democratic Party (DPJ) which is forecast to win between 55 and 77 seats.

A party spokesman told Japan's NHK television Mr Noda would have to resign over the defeat, in which some of the party's leading figures are projected to have lost their seats.

The DPJ has struggled since coming to power in 2009. Two prime ministers came and went before Mr Noda as the party struggled to deliver amid the economic downturn and 11 March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Mr Noda lost over his move to double sales tax, something he said was necessary to tackle Japan's massive debt.

'Abenomics'

By contrast, Mr Abe has promised more public spending, looser monetary policy, and to allow nuclear energy a role to play in resource-poor Japan's future despite last year's nuclear disaster at Fukushima.

Japan-China disputed islands

  • The archipelago consists of five islands and three reefs
  • Japan, China and Taiwan claim them; they are controlled by Japan and form part of Okinawa prefecture
  • Japanese businessman Kunioki Kurihara owned three of the islands but sold them to the Japanese state in September
  • The islands were also the focus of a major diplomatic row between Japan and China in 2010

But economists say there is little new in Mr Abe's policies, or 'Abenomics' as they have been called. They have been adopted by previous LDP governments without successfully renewing the Japanese economy.

Mr Abe has also called for a tough stance on a territorial row with China over islands in the East China Sea that both countries claim.

But neither of the main parties fully convinced voters. Several new parties contested the poll and the right-leaning Japan Restoration Party founded by the mayor of Osaka, Toru Hashimoto. could win as many as 50 seats.

And the nationalist former governor of Tokyo governor, Shintaro Ishihara, whose bid to buy disputed islands provoked a fierce diplomatic showdown with China, may also have won a seat in parliament according to Japanese media.

 

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  • rate this
    +2

    Comment number 42.

    Voting back in a previously failed Prime Minister is hardly the mark of a confident future looking nation. It smacks more of desperation.
    Getting tough with PRC simply means being isolated from worlds largest and fastest growing market: big Corporations already badly hurting. In short - getting tough is only tough on Japan, PRC can get what it needs from Taiwan and Korea!

  • rate this
    0

    Comment number 24.

    No mention of only 41% of the population turning out to vote. As a resident here for the past 8 years with 2 japanese children it is alarming that the the people in power and those who put them there are all so short sighted in their views to solving japans problems. But then most of these people won't be around much longer anyway. Politics is for the dinosaurs desperate for the bubble to return.

  • rate this
    +1

    Comment number 12.

    Japanese voters seem to have the same issue as we do, in that the established parties are unconvincing.

    Maybe not surprising that they've elected a govt with a more aggressive foreign policy stance given the dispute with China and the ongoing N. Korea issue.

    Just made me splutter my coffee when I saw the Lib Dems had won something!

  • rate this
    +15

    Comment number 9.

    As a Japanese citizen, this election is a shamble. 12 parties, all drifting to the right to increase enmity with our neighbors rather than looking for solutions.

    It's the same old politics that led my country to ruin. a

  • rate this
    +10

    Comment number 3.

    it's a big disappointment here in japan. the problem with so many voters here is that they don't think of the whole - they each have one particular point that settles it for them one way or the other and nothing else gets considered. in this case it's that the DPJ hasn't 'fixed' the country, and the fact that the LDP has no idea how to do so and wasn't able to in the past isn't even on the radar.

 
 

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