LINE

    Text:AAAPrint
    Politics

    Japan's ruling camp retains majority in upper house, paving way to Constitution amendment

    1
    2016-07-11 08:40Xinhua Editor: Mo Hong'e

    The Japanese ruling camp led by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe retained its majority in the parliament's upper house through a victory on Sunday's election in the chamber and paved way to Constitution amendment as upper house lawmakers who support to review the country's war-renouncing Constitution reached two-thirds majority, final election result showed early Monday.

    Half seats in the 242-member chamber was contested in the election and the ruling camp secured XX seats, with the prime minister's Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) gaining 55 seats and its small ruling partner of the Komeito Party winning 14 seats.

    After acknowledging that the ruling coalition won the election and retained the majority in the upper house, Abe told a press briefing during the vote counting that the result showed that his decision on sales tax hike postponement was correct and vowed to promote economy in the future.

    In a very cautious way, the prime minister said that the Constitution amendment should be discussed more. "Different parties have different viewpoints on the issue, therefore more discussions should be done, even among the parties that support the amendment," said Abe, but adding that the issue should be raised to the Japanese public.

    To launch a Constitution review motion requires approval by two-thirds majority in both chambers of the Japanese bicameral parliament. The Abe-led ruling bloc already secured the overwhelming majority in the lower house.

    The prime minister is a well-known historical revisionist who expressed his eagerness to review the Japanese pacifist Constitution many times. He indicated before the election that he will try to discuss the Constitution review during the autumn parliament session.

    Abe also expressed his disappointment over the election failure of incumbent Minister in charge of Okinawa affairs, but he added that the ruling camp will continue push the planned relocation of the key U.S. Futenma airbase within the Japanese southernmost prefecture of Okinawa.

    The failure of the Okinawa affairs minister, to some extent, showed serious divergence between the Japanese central government and the Okinawa prefectural government over U.S. base relocation issue, especially after a recent notorious murder case that a U.S. former marine corps killed an Okinawan woman and abandoned her body.

    The prime minister will also plan to reshuffle its cabinet based on the election outcome and to compile a new stimulus package so as to push his "Abenomics."

    The largest opposition party here, the Democratic Party, gained 32 seats on Sunday, marking an improved performance than what three years ago. Katsuya Okada, head of the Democratic Party, said that the party is recovering but not sufficient, adding his party will pay more attention to citizen's involvement in the politics.

    Okada said he will continue his work as the party's leader until September, but he stopped short that whether he will run for the party's head election to be held in the same month.

    However, voters here voiced their contradictory feeling over the election. A 30-year-old voter who identified herself as Shibata told Xinhua outside a polling office at Shibuya earlier the day that "I am against amending the Constitution, because it's likely to drag Japan into war. But I still voted for the LDP, because I don't like the opposition parties either. People say that the LDP is going to change the constitution. I really don't know what to do."

    For Shibata, however, the problem is, if she did not vote for the LDP, who could she vote for, as in her eyes, the opposition parties seemed to have also failed to offer feasible solutions to the problems that Japan is faced with.

    Shibata's words were echoed by Yamaguchi, a 20-year-old company employee who voted for the first time on Sunday. "I don't know much about these candidates. And I don't know what constitutional amendment really means to us," she said, after casting her ballots.

    Voter turnout was estimated at 53.66 percent, slightly higher than the 52.61 percent in the previous upper house election in 2013. The Japanese Kyodo News said that the additional 2.4 million new voters aged between 18 to 19 have done little to boost turnout.

      

    Related news

    MorePhoto

    Most popular in 24h

    MoreTop news

    MoreVideo

    News
    Politics
    Business
    Society
    Culture
    Military
    Sci-tech
    Entertainment
    Sports
    Odd
    Features
    Biz
    Economy
    Travel
    Travel News
    Travel Types
    Events
    Food
    Hotel
    Bar & Club
    Architecture
    Gallery
    Photo
    CNS Photo
    Video
    Video
    Learning Chinese
    Learn About China
    Social Chinese
    Business Chinese
    Buzz Words
    Bilingual
    Resources
    ECNS Wire
    Special Coverage
    Infographics
    Voices
    LINE
    Back to top Links | About Us | Jobs | Contact Us | Privacy Policy
    Copyright ©1999-2018 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
    Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
    主站蜘蛛池模板: 延庆县| 尖扎县| 宝应县| 依兰县| 洛隆县| 柘城县| 福泉市| 邹平县| 白城市| 嘉善县| 浦北县| 肃南| 清水河县| 云霄县| 涞水县| 乐陵市| 务川| 商都县| 乌鲁木齐市| 久治县| 台中县| 班玛县| 台前县| 北宁市| 精河县| 邛崃市| 赤峰市| 麻城市| 建德市| 克拉玛依市| 南和县| 营山县| 长治县| 临沂市| 房产| 专栏| 乌拉特前旗| 东兴市| 司法| 房产| 临夏市|