Yoshihide Suga Is Shoo-In As Japan's Next Prime Minister

Suga had support from key factions even before he formally announced he was running.
Thursday 17 September 2020
Chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga is set to become next Japan's prime minister after the ruling party elected him successor to outgoing leader Shinzo Abe. Photo: AFP

Chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga is set to become Japan’s next prime minister after the ruling party elected him successor to outgoing leader Shinzo Abe this week. With 377 of the 534 valid votes cast by Liberal Democratic Party lawmakers and regional representatives, Suga was significantly ahead of his two rivals. Given his party’s legislative majority, he is expected to handily win a parliamentary vote and become prime minister, succeeding Abe, who is resigning for health reasons.

The 71-year-old repeated his pledge to continue Abe’s policies as he accepted the party’s nomination as leader and said, “In order to overcome the crisis and give the Japanese people a sense of relief, we need to succeed in what Prime Minister Abe has been implementing. This is my mission.”

Even before he formally announced his run, the 71-year-old had won the support of key factions within the ruling party, with his candidacy viewed as promising stability.

The LDP chose to poll only its lawmakers in parliament and three representatives from each of the country’s 47 regions, eschewing a broader ballot including rank-and-file members that officials said would have taken too long to organise.

 

A shining Japan