Japanese election campaign under way
October 8, 1996
Web posted at: 5:20 p.m. EDT (2120 GMT)
From Correspondent Bill Dorman
TOKYO (CNN) -- About 1,500 candidates for Japan's lower house
of parliament officially began a 12-day campaign Tuesday,
leading up to the October 20 general election.
"We have entered an era of great change and Japan is
struggling," said Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto at his
first campaign stop in Tokyo. "We must change the system
governing this country."
Some analysts are predicting a low turnout, partly because
voters are discouraged with the recent chaos in Japanese
politics. But still, Hashimoto and his fellow Liberal
Democratic Party candidates are on the campaign trail pushing
for an end to coalition governments and a return to LDP rule.
In the 10 years after World War II, Japan went through 10
governments, and a series of ruling parties. Then, in 1955,
the LDP formed its first government and began a 38-year
domination of Japanese politics.
That era came to a close with a no confidence vote and a fall
from power in 1993, when the LDP discovered it could not
monopolize political power forever.
"The changing age just started from 1993," says Kazuhide
Uekusa, a senior economist at Nomura Research Institute,
"but I can't say that this kind of change has finished."
In three years, Japanese politics has shown little sign of
ending the period of change. And with the demise of the LDP's
grip on power, change has meant coalition governments.
Morihiro Hosokawa lasted less than a year atop an unwieldy
eight-party coalition; Tsutomu Hata headed a minority
government for all of two months. Then something very strange
happened.
Socialist Tomiichi Murayama became prime minister of a
government largely comprised of his long-time political
rivals, the LDP. Murayama held on longer than may expected -
- until this January, when he was replaced by Hashimoto, the
head of the LDP.
As trade minister, Hashimoto had worked through a
confrontation with the U.S. over automobiles. And as prime
minister, he's handled the issue of U.S. troops in Okinawa,
met with other international leaders, and helped keep the
economy from sliding into a ditch.
Analysts say that, should the LDP win the election, and the
coalition government remains supportive, he is likely to be
chosen prime minister again.
Hashimoto would much prefer to head a government that returns
to total control of the LDP, but most analysts say that is
highly unlikely.
Related stories:
Related site:
Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive.
© 1996 Cable News Network, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.