Shintaro Ishihara Elected for Third Term as Tokyo Governor
Jiji and Kyodo are now both predicting that Shintaro Ishihara has defeated challenger Shiro Asano and will be elected to a third term as Governor of Tokyo. Kyodo’s ongoing coverage describes the elections:
LDP-affiliated candidates are on course to capture three of the five prefectures [with gubernatorial elections], including Tokyo, seeing off rival candidates associated with the DPJ. DPJ-linked candidates are winning in the remaining two.
In Tokyo, voter turnout was estimated to be 40.85 percent as of 6 p.m., up from 36.15 percent at the same time in the previous election four years ago, according to the Tokyo metropolitan election management committee.
An Ishihara victory was predicted in TPR’s recent Seijigiri #21.
Mr Ishihara speaking outside the East Exit of Tokyo’s Shinjuku Station on March 28:
Also, thanks to Japan Probe for alerting us to the existence of a second video featuring candidate Toyama Kouichi (after the ‘read more’ link):
Related Posts:
- Seijigiri #21: Yasukuni and the Tokyo Gubernatorial Election
- Law: 1, Disturbing side of Nationalism: 0
- Ishihara gets a third term, DPJ makes gains in prefectural assemblies, a record number of women are elected, and Lindsay Ann Hawker’s killer still at large - TPR News: Wednesday, April 11, 2007
- Seijigiri #17 - February 9, 2007 - Ministerial misspeak leads to the birthrate leads to 外人犯罪裏ファイル leads to some intemperance
- The Road to Seijigiri #6










So, I’ve spent a bit of time this afternoon trying to come up with something that would scrape Japanese news sites for the results of approval ratings polls as they are updated, but it proved to be a useless endeavor. I’ll have to update them myself as they’re published, since the data simply isn’t available in any real usable form. For now, I’ve put together something that will make an HTML chart with three sources. I’m hoping to develop this into something with the historical data from each source, but I don’t have much free time these days…it might take a few days. So, for now, this chart will keep track of the most recent poll data on Abe’s approval rating:
The general agreement is that the DPRK, in some capacity, tested a nuclear weapon. The general agreement also seems to be that the North Korean - American rivalry and the Kim Family Regime’s strained relations with China are the points to watch, that this means regional tensions are on the rise, that South Korea, the PRC, and Japan will put their differences aside and act largely together, so that TV commentators throughout the English-speaking world can tell their half-interested viewers who’s good, who’s bad, and, if you’re a Fox viewer, who needs to be attacked with overwhelming force and obliterated for not following instructions.
Initial reports started rolling in four to five hours ago: The 