Seijigiri #36: Ozawa’s Melodrama, Japan’s Mission in the Indian Ocean, Abe’s Concessions on the Comfort Women Issue, and Wasteful Government Spending
Seijigiri is back with release #36, and co-hosts Garrett DeOrio and Ken Worsley jump straight into the latest news and discuss the situation surrounding Democratic Party of Japan president Ichiro Ozawa. Ozawa offered his resignation last Sunday and rescinded that offer a few days later, in response to internal party pressure that he stay on.
Our hosts consider what this means for the DPJ, what it says about the party itself, and how it might affect the DPJ’s relationship with the ruling Liberal Democratic Party.
After that, the talk turns to Japan’s mission in the Indian Ocean, where support for the US-led coalition forces ended on November 1. The current extraordinary Diet session, which has been extended by 35 days, will prove to be a test for Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda. Will he be able to get a new bill passed allowing Japan to take (symbolic) part in coalition actions?
Then, the discussion turns to revelations that former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe dropped his claims that there was no proof that the Japanese military had coerced (in the “narrow” sense) women into sexual servitude during the second world war in exchange for US support with regards to the North Korean abductee issue. Was Abe given a face-saving way out of his untenable stance?
Finally, our hosts take a look at a recent report by the Board of Audit that the government spent 31 billion yen in 451 wasteful and inappropriate accounting cases during fiscal 2006. Which ministry took the title of wasting the most taxpayer money? Who wasted the least? You’ll have to listen to find out…
As always, thank you for listening.
Since we recorded this, the Lower House passed an MSDF bill.
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