DPJ Leader Ozawa Offers his Resignation

Filed under: Japan in the News, Politics
Posted by Garrett DeOrio at 5:11 pm on Sunday, November 4, 2007

What’s a political party for?

No, not that, I mean what’s the raison d’etre of a political party? To attain and hold political power, of course. A quick survey of political parties around the world and through generations will show this to be the only real goal of any political party of any stripe. Principles would be, maybe, a distant third behind lining the pockets of members at public expense.

So, if you’re the head of a fractious, infighting opposition party in what is essentially still a one-party state and your chances of taking over the government are not on the rise, what do you do with an offer from the big boys to share the power?

If you were the Democratic Party’s Ichiro Ozawa, you could, it’s true, note that you’d recently had a successful turn in the opposition, forcing the (at least temporary) end of the Maritime Self-Defense Force’s refueling mission in the Indian Ocean. You could think of your star as being ascendant and view the Liberal Democratic Party’s overture as a sign of weakness. You could also stand on principle and reject the offer immediately.

Or you could recognize the fact that your party suffers from a lot of internal bickering and some serious internal differences and take the proposal back to them to talk your next move over.

You’d be damned if you did and damned if you didn’t.

In a press conference today, Ozawa revealed that Prime Minister Fukuda had offered to adopt Ozawa’s principle that any and all SDF actions related to military campaigns must have prior approval of the UN. Ozawa said he viewed a coalition with the LDP as a possible chance at gaining the Lower House power necessary to fulfilling the party’s promises to the public.

He was shot down by DPJ executives and, in the press conference, said this was akin to a vote of no-confidence.

DPJ Secretary General Yukio Hatoyama said he hoped Ozawa would change his mind.

In response to rumors that it was he, and not Fukuda, who first proposed a coalition, Ozawa blasted all of the media except for the Asahi Shimbun and Nikkei Shimbun, saying other media outlets had fomented and propagated libelous rumors designed to destroy him, his political career, and his party. Politicians aren’t known for being straight talkers, and Ozawa is certainly a politician, but I believe him this time. What the DPJ apparently needs is more powerful press club than that of the LDP-controlled government. Until then, the LDP decides what the political news is.


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Comment by Matt Dioguardi

November 5, 2007 @ 1:15 pm

This is certainly an interesting predicament. I am waiting anxiously to see what comes of the meeting Ozawa and party heads are supposed to have this afternoon.

I’ve been trying to follow the coverage, especial the blog coverage, but I’m still not clear on some things.

What does this mean: “Ozawa said he viewed a coalition with the LDP as a possible chance at gaining the Lower House power necessary to fulfilling the party’s promises to the public. He was shot down by DPJ executives and, in the press conference, said this was akin to a vote of no-confidence.”

Does that mean it’s Ozawa’s way or the highway? If so, is that good or bad?

Or even if Ozawa stays and there is no coalition, was this a move by Ozawa to gain a stronger position within the DPJ? Or is it just Ozawa acting on principle?

Could this be what triggers the party realignment that so many have predicted for so long?

Is it all a secret Fukuda plot?

Comment by Ken Y-N

November 5, 2007 @ 1:21 pm

DeOrio, I must admit to being totally baffled by this sudden resignation, but then I was also baffled by his previous declarations on being opposed to refueling but in favour of men on the ground in Afghanistan. I’m looking forward to you lot helping me understand the situation a bit better.

As for complaining most of the press was out to get him; during the Thatcher and Major years just about all national papers bar The Mirror and The Guardian were Tory, but John Smith then Tony Blair managed to get their acts together and now the split is definitely in Labour’s favour from a circulation point of view.

Comment by DeOrio

November 5, 2007 @ 3:37 pm

Gentlemen, as I see it Ozawa was doing what he does best: making deals and trying to increase his party’s political power. Other DPJ leaders saw this as something of a betrayal of the DPJ’s push for a viable two-party system and unnecessary since the DPJ won convincingly in July.

I think calling the DPJ leadership’s rejection of his merger plans a “vote of no confidence” meant more that Ozawa didn’t think he’d be able to do much more if he didn’t have the lieutenants he appointed supporting him anymore.

I, too, was surprised that Ozawa had resigned. It didn’t seem likely that the coalition deal would go through, but I thought that would mean a return to politics as usual for the remainder of the extraordinary Diet session. I guess not.

As for Ozawa’s motivation, I would guess (and this is only a guess) that the combination of his poor health and the LDP’s rebound in popularity have combined to create a situation where it is simply not his advantage to be at the head of the DPJ. Add to this the fact that he lined up a way for the DPJ to have real power for the first time ever and his own guys shot him down and it’s not hard to see why Ozawa might be thinking, “Why even bother?”

Ken and I will have a new edition of TPR News up in a couple of hours with a bit more info. You’ll also be able to hear our sonorous voices again.

Ken Y-N, as for the press thing, I think, in this case, they were out to get him in a way. This would not be at all unusual for the Japanese media (especially once the Asahi and Nikkei are out of the picture). Just look at what the shukanshi did to SGI’s Daisaku Ikeda - false rape charges going on for years - because he spoke out against the LDP and gained a large measure of popularity.

In general, the Japanese media have no aversion at all to libel or blatant lies (the latter, thankfully, usually confined to the shukanshi), love snesationalism to an extent that would make Rupert Murdoch blush, and know there is no penalty for engaging in any of the above. Mix this in with the lack of investigative journalism and fact-checking rampant in the press clubs and you have conditions perfect for a rumor like “Ozawa approached Fukuda asking for a tie-up.”

Coming from a guy like Ozawa, though, it is a bit pot and kettle.

Pingback by equinoXio » » Dimite Ichirō Ozawa, el líder del principal partido opositor de Japón

November 5, 2007 @ 10:37 pm

[…] El líder del Partido Demócrata de Japón (PDJ), Ichirō Ozawa, ha anunciado este domingo su intención de renunciar a su cargo, por el malestar que produjo al interior de su colectividad una reunión con el primer ministro Yasuo Fukuda que se llevó a cabo el viernes, en la que se contemplaba la formación de una gran coalición integrada por el PDJ y los partidos oficialistas, el Partido Liberal Democrático (PLD) y el budista Nuevo Kōmeitō (NK). Aunque Ozawa rechazó la propuesta, si bien de forma vacilante, según el derechista Yomiuri Shimbun, el diario de mayor circulación del mundo, la idea de la coalición fue del propio Ozawa, quien antes de anunciar su rechazo se reunió con dirigentes del PDJ una vez culminado su encuentro con Fukuda. En la rueda de prensa, Ozawa, de 65 años, manifestó que "hubo confusión política en referencia a la propuesta del primer ministro para formar una coalición. Para asumir mi responsabilidad, decidí dimitir como representante". Ozawa atacó a los medios, con excepción del izquierdista Asahi Shimbun y del centrista y económico Nihon Keizai Shimbun, por haber "difundido rumores" con la intención de destruirlo a él y a su partido. […]

Comment by Ken Worsley

November 5, 2007 @ 10:50 pm

He certainly has grabbed the spotlight. He and other high ranking DPJ members are all over the TV.

Comment by DeOrio

November 6, 2007 @ 10:03 am

I won’t go so far as to say this isn’t big news, but I think the fact that it has dominated TV news and took over most of the front page space of most dailies also speaks to how little of interest or real merit is going on in this Diet session. We’re now looking at an extension for the passage of a band-aid bill. What confuses me is why the DPJ would agree to an extension if they don’t want the bill passed.

What also confuses me is what the DPJ thought they were getting into when they put Ozawa in the top job a year and a half ago. Some pundits are blasting Ozawa for damaging the DPJ’s credibility by even considering a power-sharing arrangement with the DPJ, saying his consideration of the deal, followed by his resignation as party president has made the DPJ less viable as a large opposition party.

I’d say that was done in April 2006. You don’t make a guy like Ozawa Ichiro president of your party because you’re idealistically pure (which the DPJ has never been anyway.) You don’t follow his politically expedient lead to an electoral victory - promising agricultural subsidies from a broke government, for example, or throwing up an untenable mix of catchy Left and Right ideas designed solely to get votes - then balk at such a path’s logical end.

What does the DPJ leadership expect, a sudden rout at the polls? Tossing the LDP out convincingly? A DPJ partnership with the LDP would not be ideal, or even all the great for getting things done, but it wouldn’t be the end of two-party government, either. If the DPJ were sincerely concerned with getting its initiatives passed, it would have jumped at the chance.

It seems to me that the DPJ has long since followed the LDP in its worst ways - doing whatever it takes to get power while showing little concern for positive improvement. Ozawa’s consideration of a coalition and his subsequent resignation are symtpoms of deeper problems within the party, not the problem itself.

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