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Not so popular or powerful: Japan PM faces many feuds
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  • Not so popular or powerful: Japan PM faces many feuds

Not so popular or powerful: Japan PM faces many feuds

FP Archives • August 30, 2011, 11:23:17 IST
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Noda was not the most popular of the candidates with the public nor did he have the strongest support base inside the party, which remains divided by personal feuds and policy disputes two years after sweeping to power with promises to change how Japan is governed.

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Not so popular or powerful: Japan PM faces many feuds

Japan Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda is to be voted in on Tuesday as the country’s sixth prime minister in five years amid doubts he can unite his fractious ruling party while tackling myriad economic ills and a nuclear crisis. Noda, a 54-year-old fiscal hawk who wants to curb Japan’s huge public debt, was elected head of the ruling Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) in a bruising run-off. He had come in second among five candidates in an inconclusive initial round. [caption id=“attachment_72900” align=“alignleft” width=“380” caption=“Noda repeated his call for “prudent fiscal management” on Tuesday at a final news conference as finance minister, but he acknowledged that the economy faced downside risks. Reuters”] ![](https://images.firstpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/noda3.jpg "Japan's Finance Minister Noda speaks during news conference in Tokyo") [/caption] The challenges he faces are legion: coping with a strong yen that threatens to undermine exports, forging a new energy policy while ending a crisis at a crippled nuclear plant, rebuilding Japan’s tsunami-devastated northeast and finding funds to pay for that and bulging social security costs in the ageing society. Noda repeated his call for “prudent fiscal management” on Tuesday at a final news conference as finance minister, but he acknowledged that the economy faced downside risks. “I am aware of the problems of the strong yen and deflation. But at the same time, we need to maintain fiscal discipline,” Noda said. He also said he wanted to consult opposition parties, who control parliament’s upper house and can block bills, on a bill to double the 5 percent sales tax by mid-decade as well as on funding for reconstruction. In an apparent nod to Ozawa backers who want the party to stick to campaign promises to put more cash in consumers’ hands, Noda added: “Our (party) motto is people’s lives come first. Also I emphasised support for the middle class. “We need not to lose sight (of these principles).” No Japanese premier has lasted much longer than a year since 2006, when the charismatic Junichiro Koizumi ended a rare five-year term. Noda was not the most popular of the candidates with the public nor did he have the strongest support base inside the party, which remains divided by personal feuds and policy disputes two years after sweeping to power with promises to change how Japan is governed. But critics of party powerbroker Ichiro Ozawa, whose backing put trade minister Banri Kaieda in first place after the initial party vote, rallied around Noda to vault him to victory. Some optimists say the low-key Noda may be the best bet for Japan now given all the hurdles to governing. “In Japanese tradition, the less lustrous politicians have tended to be more effective,” said Andrew Horvat, director of the Stanford Japan Center in Kyoto. Many pundits, however, are already predicting that Noda may well end up the latest of Japan’s revolving door leaders. “The difficult structural problems remain – a divided party, hostile opposition parties that deprive the government of a majority in the upper house and mountains of difficult and divisive problems facing the country,” said Sophia University professor Koichi Nakano. “These present a very high hurdle for anyone who wants to stay in office. Noda is rather more likeable and less tainted than Kaieda… but how long he will last, I don’t know.” Noda’s immediate task on Tuesday was to select lawmakers to fill the DPJ’s top executive posts, including the key position of secretary-general, the party’s second-in-command. The appointments will signal how conciliatory he means to be to Ozawa backers, many of whom object to tax hikes for fear of putting off voters. Whether Noda can unify the fractious party “ultimately depends on how conciliatory he can get in terms of appointments, but if he goes too far, that will antagonise the public,” Nakano said. “That is extremely delicate.” Reuters

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