DPJ Leader Ozawa Offers his Resignation
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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