Seijigiri #24: Abe’s approval ratings bounce back, what’s being done in the Diet, and the foreign trainee program
In this edition of Seijigiri, we begin by discussing why the approval ratings for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s Cabinet have risen in the last month. Is it simply due to the fact that there have been no verbal gaffes by Cabinet members? Or is Abe doing something right?
Then we take a look back at January’s Seijigiri #16, when we discussed the seven points that we expected would form the crux of Prime Minister Abe’s efforts in this year’s Diet session. We take a look at how those issues are playing out, especially with regard to constitutional and educational reform. Why is constitutional reform on the right path thus far and educational reform so far off? We also discuss the debacle surrounding the Education Rebuilding Council’s recent decision to abandon its proposal that parents breastfeed their children and not let them watch too much TV. What is happening with Abe’s special advisers?
Finally, we look at systemic failures in the foreign worker trainee program. Why is a program that allows companies to use foreign workers as a source of (illegally) cheap labor allowed to continue? Why can’t the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare do something about what it has acknowledged is an ongoing problem until 2009? We discuss the issues surrounding foreign labor in Japan and how those fit into what bureaucrats, politicians and Keidanren are all pushing for.
Once again, thank you for listening. We’re aiming for the release of Seijigiri #25 to be on May 28, two weeks from today.
Related Posts:
- Seijigiri #45: Could a Cabinet Reshuffle Help Fukuda’s Approval Ratings? Problems with the Cabinet, Road Taxes, 59ing in the Diet, and Koizumi is back on the scene
- State of the Trans-Pacific Radio for June
- Seijigiri #23: Abe, Aso and Kyuma to the US, and the state of constitutional reform in Japan
- Seijigiri #43: Diplomatic Affairs, Fukuda’s Falling Approval Ratings, and “Gridlock” in the Diet
- Seijigiri #41: The Budget is Passed, and Fukuda is Feeling the Pressure










