Japan ex-FM Kishida wins ruling party vote, set to become next PM
Former Japanese foreign minister Fumio Kishida reacts as he won in the Liberal Democrat Party leadership election in Tokyo Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2021. (AP Photo)


Japan’s former foreign minister Fumio Kishida has won the governing party leadership election and is set to become the next prime minister.

Kishida replaces outgoing party leader Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, who is stepping down after serving only one year since taking office last September. As new leader of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), Kishida is certain to be elected the next prime minister on Monday in parliament, where his party and coalition partner control the house.

At a Tokyo hotel, lawmakers will cast their votes one by one in a ballot box on stage when their names were called. Wednesday’s vote was seen as a test of whether the party can move out of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's shadow. His influence in government and party affairs has largely muzzled diverse views and shifted the party to the right, experts say.

A former banker from Hiroshima, Kishida enjoys only moderate public support and has a bland image. His victory could spell problems for the LDP in a general election due within weeks. Kishida defeated former defense and foreign minister Taro Kono, seen as an outspoken maverick, in the second round of a run-off vote. Two female contenders, Sanae Takaichi, 60, and Seiko Noda, 61, dropped out after the first round.

Kishida must call an election by Nov. 28 and faces the task of rebuilding an economy staggering from the COVID-19 pandemic, but his consensus style will help him consolidate power within the factious ruling party.

Kishida's victory is unlikely to trigger a huge shift in policies as Japan seeks to cope with an assertive China and revive an economy hit by the pandemic, with the soft-spoken lawmaker highlighting the need to focus on reducing income disparity.

He shares a broad consensus on the need to boost Japan's defenses and strengthen security ties with the United States and other partners, including the QUAD grouping of Japan, the United States, Australia and India, while preserving vital economic ties with China and holding regular summit meetings.

Specifically, Kishida wants to beef up Japan's coast guard and backs the passing of a resolution condemning China's treatment of members of the Uyghur minority. He wants to appoint a prime ministerial aide to monitor their human rights situation.

Kishida said deregulation during the reform era in the early 2000s widened the gap between the haves and have-nots and that former prime minister Shinzo Abe's "Abenomics," which sought to fix tattered finances by achieving high growth and boosting tax revenues, did not result in benefits trickling down.

Kishida has said fiscal consolidation would be a major pillar of his policy and in the past has voiced doubts over the Bank of Japan's ultra-loose policy, saying in 2018 that stimulus cannot last forever.

With the economy suffering from the COVID-19 pandemic, Kishida reversed course to say the BOJ must maintain its massive stimulus. He proposed a spending package of more than 30 trillion yen, adding that Japan likely would not raise a sales tax rate from 10% "for about a decade."

He stressed the need to distribute more wealth to households, in contrast to the focus of Abe's "Abenomics" policies on boosting corporate profits in the hope that benefits would trickle down to wage-earners.