ངོ་འཕྲད་བདེ་བའི་དྲ་འབྲེལ།

གཟའ་པ་སངས། ༢༠༢༤/༠༣/༢༩

Japan’s Finance Minister Wins Party Race to Succeed Kan as Prime Minister


In a party runoff election Monday, Japan’s Finance Minister, Yoshihiko Noda, defeated Trade Minister Banri Kaieda to put himself in position to be the country’s next prime minister.

A 54-year-old veteran politician, who currently serves as finance minister, is poised to become Japan’s new prime minister Tuesday.

Yoshihiko Noda was selected by the majority of the members of parliament from the Democratic Party of Japan who cast ballots Monday in Tokyo.

The official party announcement in the runoff election that Noda has received 215 votes, while Trade Minister (Banri) Kaieda garnered 177 votes.

Former Foreign Minister Seiji Maehara, who opinion polls indicated was the public’s favorite in the contest, finished third out of five candidates in the first round of Monday’s party election.

The DPJ controls the more powerful lower house of parliament, thus Noda is ensured victory in Tuesday’s voting to select the prime minister.

Noda favors raising taxes to deal with Japan’s debt and to revive the moribund economy, the world’s third largest.

Speaking to his fellow lawmakers immediately after his election as party president, Noda vowed to battle deflation and stem the continuing rise of the Japanese currency, which hurts the country’s competitiveness.

Noda also vows a redoubling of efforts to help Japan recover from the natural and nuclear disasters of mid-March.

The calamities led to the downfall of the man Noda will succeed -- the outgoing prime minister, Naoto Kan. He stepped down as party president on Friday after less than 15 months in office, clearing the way for the DPJ election.

Mr. Kan’s popularity plummeted as his government attempted to cope with the unprecedented triple disaster that hit the country on March 11th: the magnitude 9.0 earthquake which triggered a massive tsunami and the subsequent meltdown of reactors at the coastal Fukushima-1 nuclear power plant. The disasters have left 20,000 people dead or missing.

However, there are few expectations Kan’s successor will stay in offer for a long time. Noda will become Japan’s sixth government leader since Junichiro Koizumi left office in September, 2006.

The DPJ is beset with political infighting. Some analysts predict the party could split within months. Others expect a general election to be held next year which will bring back into power the opposition conservatives, the Liberal Democratic Party. The LDP has run Japan for most of the post-World War Two era.


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