Is Abe Sick or is that just the “In” Thing these days?

Filed under: Japan in the News
Posted by Garrett DeOrio at 11:35 pm on Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yosano is now promulgating the rumor we here at TPR heard earlier, but were saving for a bombshell revelation:

Prime Minister Abe is unwell. Specifically, he cracked under relentless pressure from the media and right wing groups - neither of whom he was able to please.

DPJ Chief Ichiro Ozawa and LDP postal rebel and People’s New Party leader, Shizuka Kamei, both expressed their doubts and called the claim a ploy to blame Abe’s leadership failures on the media.

More on this soon, no doubt.

3:00 a.m.

I normally hate doing this, but things disappear so fast from the Kyodo site that I will. Kyodo’s full article on Abe’s resignation today:

TOKYO, Sept. 12 KYODO
After only a year in office, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced his intention Wednesday to resign to take responsibility for causing political confusion, saying it would be difficult for him to regain public trust and secure an extension of Japan’s refueling mission in the Indian Ocean.
‘’I determined today to step down,'’ a visibly weary Abe said at a hastily arranged press conference. ‘’I reshuffled the Cabinet in order to push forward with reforms but under the current situation it has become difficult for me to secure the people’s support and trust to vigorously implement policies.'’
Meanwhile, Chief Cabinet Secretary Kaoru Yosano said at a news conference later that Abe’s health was also a reason behind his resignation, saying the premier has been distressed trying to balance his duties and his physical condition.
The ruling Liberal Democratic Party is arranging a party presidential election to replace Abe on Sept. 19, with candidacies to be accepted from Friday, a senior LDP member said.
LDP Secretary General Taro Aso is seen as a major contender in the contest, while former Finance Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki and former Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuo Fukuda have also been suggested as possible candidates.
The next prime minister is likely to be inaugurated by a parliamentary vote possibly on Sept. 20 and the Diet will be idled until then having only been convened for an extraordinary session Monday.
Wednesday’s announcement, made after Abe abruptly canceled a question-and-answer session in parliament with opposition lawmakers, came as a surprise as Abe had just reiterated his determination to pursue his duties and political goals in a policy address Monday when the extra Diet session convened.
The timing of his decision also puzzled many in both the ruling and opposition camps, given the fact that Abe had until then refused to resign on various occasions despite strong pressure, such as the ruling coalition’s heavy defeat in the House of Councillors election in July, a spate of resignations of Cabinet ministers and endless money scandals involving key members of his administration.
Abe said it would be better if he steps down and a new prime minister pursues a new law for the extension as well as other policy matters, adding he hopes that with his resignation the ruling LDP will be able to generate new energy to deal with the political gridlock with the opposition.
‘’I think that having a new prime minister attend the upcoming U.N. General Assembly will perhaps bring about change,'’ he said, referring to the gathering of world leaders in New York later this month.
Abe also cited opposition Democratic Party of Japan President Ichiro Ozawa’s refusal to hold a meeting on the extension issue. Ozawa has repeatedly said he is against an extension and the opposition plans to block the bill in the upper house where it holds a majority.
‘’I made up my mind that I must bring about a change to the current situation by stepping down, because unfortunately today a meeting with the opposition leader could not be realized,'’ the premier said, pausing three times as he spoke.
‘’With this, I decided that I cannot fulfill my promises and that perhaps my being prime minister has become an obstacle'’ to winning an extension in parliament, he said.
Meanwhile, Ozawa stressed at a separate news conference that the DPJ’s opposition to the extension remains unchanged, saying, ‘’There is no way that our thinking will change because of a change in the Liberal Democratic Party.'’
The opposition leader also reiterated his party’s call for an early House of Representatives election in which it will aim to take power from the LDP-led coalition.
Abe’s decision to resign comes after he indicated over the weekend that he was ready to step down if he failed to get the Diet to extend beyond Nov. 1 the law authorizing the Maritime Self-Defense Force’s refueling mission in support of U.S.-led antiterrorism operations in and around Afghanistan.
Yosano, the top government spokesman, declined to discuss the specifics of Abe’s health problem but said the premier’s condition had deteriorated, especially after his three-nation Asia visit in late August. But Yosano noted that it was not a psychological issue.
‘’I have spoken with the premier many times since Monday and I felt that he wanted to convey something to me. But as we always focused on how to get the antiterrorism special measures law passed, I wasn’t able to catch the subtle signals,'’ Yosano said. ‘’I remember all the scenes and now that I think about it, those were indeed the signals.'’
Asked to elaborate, Yosano cited one episode when he proposed to Abe how to proceed with extending the antiterrorism support mission, and the premier replied, ‘’But even so, the circumstances are extremely difficult.'’
The LDP’s Aso said that Abe told him Monday of his intention to step down but that he had encouraged the prime minister to stay on.
After Abe announced his resignation, Aso told party executives that the new leader must be chosen ‘’urgently to avoid creating a political vacuum.'’
LDP Diet affairs chief Tadamori Oshima, meanwhile, proposed that Diet deliberations be suspended until a new LDP president, who will succeed Abe as the party’s leader and prime minister, is chosen and the opposition camp accepted the idea.
Since the July election defeat when the ruling bloc lost its majority in the upper house, Abe had refused to step down and clung to power. He eventually reshuffled his scandal-tainted Cabinet and the LDP leadership on Aug. 27 and vowed to ‘’start anew.'’
But he continued to face difficulties with more scandals surfacing immediately after the reshuffle, notably one involving the misuse of farm subsidies that led to the resignation of the newly named agriculture minister.
Other scandals involving ministers’ political funds also came to light, providing fuel for the opposition camp to pursue Abe’s responsibility and to plan a censure motion against Abe at the just-convened parliament session.
Abe took office on Sept. 26 last year with his major political goals being to revise the pacifist Constitution and to revamp the education system to instill more patriotism in children under his slogan of freeing Japan from its ‘’postwar regime.'’
Within weeks of becoming prime minister, Abe succeeded in mending fences with China and South Korea by visiting both countries, warming ties that had chilled for years under his predecessor Junichiro Koizumi.
However, money scandals and various gaffes soon plagued his administration, with the first minister resigning in December. Another committed suicide in May and three others have resigned since then.
Abe faced strong criticism for his handling of the government’s massive record-keeping blunders with public pension accounts and the lack of concrete policies to revitalize local economies and improve social disparities.
His administration’s failure to attend to the public’s concerns about daily life instead of political ideals was seen as a major factor in the July election in which the LDP suffered a historic defeat.

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September 13, 2007 @ 5:06 pm

Bye Bye, Abe…

PJM Tokyo: The resignation of scandal-plagued, ineffective Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was inevitable, yet managed to take the country by surprise, reports PJM correspondent Garrett DeOrio…….

Comment by Julián Ortega Martínez

September 13, 2007 @ 11:54 pm

Well, it seems he was really sick anyway…
http://timesonline.typepad.com/times_tokyo_weblog/2007/09/on-a-drip.html

Comment by DeOrio

September 14, 2007 @ 12:47 am

I’m still not entirely convinced. I’m going to put up a Shasetsu on that soon, though - what it means to check into the hospital when you’re a high-powered, high-profile figure in a bad position in Japan. I’m not saying he’s faking it, just that it’s not the reason he stepped down.

Comment by Durf

September 14, 2007 @ 11:16 am

Might be related to the South Korean wheelchair thing:
http://tinyurl.com/2ankbs

Comment by DeOrio

September 14, 2007 @ 12:23 pm

Which has, for decades, also been the Japanese wheelchair thing. That’s pretty much what I’m saying.

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