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Can This Man Save the LDP?
 
Japan's new prime minister, Taro Aso, must quickly devise a realistic plan to reform Japan's economy and justify its global role if he and his Liberal Democratic Party are to survive.
 

Japan's third prime minister in twelve months, Taro Aso, faces significant challenges in his first months in office. Forced to grapple with economic downturn and partisan political paralysis, Aso must quickly devise a realistic plan to reform Japan's economy and justify its global role if he and his Liberal Democratic Party are to survive.

 
Resident Scholar
Michael Auslin
 
Taro Aso became Japan's third prime minister in less than 24 months last week with one goal in mind: survival. He inherits the leadership of the Liberal Democratic Party at the most perilous moment in its 53-year history. The LDP has ruled Japan continuously since 1955, except for a 10-month period back in the early 1990s. The LDP's fate and Mr. Aso's will be decided by the next general election for the Lower House of the Diet, which may come as early as next month. Most observers believe the LDP will likely lose its absolute majority in the Lower House to the Democratic Party of Japan, thus leading to the first complete opposition take over of government since 1955. Early indicators are not good for Mr. Aso, as his approval ratings are below 50%, and his most controversial minister, the Nanjing Massacre-denying Nariaki Nakayama, has already resigned due to offensive remarks over Japan's minorities, farmers and teachers.

The LDP's demise, however, will not be brought about solely by Mr. Aso's clumsy start, nor because of the failures of his two immediate predecessors, Yasuo Fukuda and Shinzo Abe. In reality, Japan long has been in an extended period of political realignment, stretching back to 1993 and the first loss of power for the LDP at the hands of current DPJ head Ichiro Ozawa. Back then, Mr. Ozawa, a brash young LDP powerbroker, bolted from the party with a few other heavyweights to form the first of several splinter parties. He shepherded a coalition of parties that took power in 1993-94, and ever since has been stirring up Japanese politics by forming and dissolving opposition parties with the goal of taking power either from within or without the LDP. The LDP gained a reprieve during the nearly-six year rule of Junichiro Koizumi from 2001 through 2006, but he in fact helped hasten the majority party's end by attacking the faction system and waging war on LDP leaders who opposed his reform plans.

Taro Aso has to show that the Liberal Democratic Party has a clear agenda for reviving the economy, continuing reform, slowing the income gap, and improving public services, such as health care.

The endgame of this 15-year era of political instability began in July 2007, when Mr. Ozawa's DPJ captured the Upper House of parliament, leading to a divided government for the first time in postwar Japan. Novice Prime Ministers Abe and Fukuda found their legislative agendas blocked by the DPJ, and were largely unwilling to use the LDP's two-thirds majority in the Lower House to ram through bills. Both Messrs. Abe and Fukuda resigned largely out of frustration at their inability to sell a program to the voters or work with the DPJ to pass legislation, and their sudden surrenders only cemented the image of a party no longer able to govern effectively.

This is where Taro Aso's challenge lies. He quickly must convince Japan's voters that he has inherited the mantle of reform from popular former Prime Minister Koizumi. Mr. Aso has to show that the LDP has a clear agenda for reviving the economy, continuing reform, slowing the income gap, and improving public services, such as health care. He must also make a compelling case for continuing and deepening Japan's engagement with Asia and the world. In addition, he must decide when to call for parliamentary elections and whether to try to pass a supplemental budget to stimulate the economy before the elections.

All of this is a pretty tall order, especially if Mr. Aso decides to call earlier elections in order to capitalize on the newness of his rule. Mr. Aso is an engaging if controversial figure in Japan. He is the grandson of the legendary Shigeru Yoshida, Japan's most important postwar prime minister, who held power for seven years and set the country on its pacifist, economically oriented course. Mr. Aso is well-known as a fan of Japanese comics, or manga, and has a rapport with younger Japanese usually lacking among LDP politicians. As foreign minister under Prime Minister Abe, he promoted a "values-based" diplomacy, yet is equally known for statements that some see as nationalistic, if not chauvinistic. One such reported comment praised the compulsory education Japan imposed on Taiwan during its colonial rule of the island before World War II.

Prime Minster Aso's new cabinet largely avoids the "unity cabinet"-type appointments of LDP heavyweights that marked the Abe and Fukuda administrations. Mr. Aso, it seems, will be the main voice, as well as the public face of his government, and some of his key appointments are first timers, such as Defense Minister Yasukazu Hamada. He has also continued an LDP tradition of appointing offspring of former premiers, including the daughter of the late Keizo Obuchi as gender minister and the son of LDP statesman Yasuhiro Nakasone as foreign minister.

Given the continuing political uncertainty in Japan, as well as Mr. Aso's rocky start, it is unlikely that any key initiatives will be enacted soon. For the United States, which will undergo its own change in administrations next January, there likely will be more months of uncertainty regarding Tokyo's ability to push forward on completing alliance realignment or articulating a global role. Japan's trade partners will also wait to see if Mr. Aso jump-starts economic reforms that increase consumption, cut regulation, or liberalizes the investment sector. The perception that Japan is in limbo will continue as long as politicians are unable to come up with a comprehensive and effective policy platform.

Most of all, therefore, Asia will be watching as the region's oldest democracy struggles to end its political paralysis. Japan's neighbors and friends will wait to see if the next elections usher in a true two-party system in which the opposition DPJ potentially sets the county on a new course. Even if that does happen, however, the hard questions about domestic reform and Japan's role in the world will remain for the country's new leaders.

Michael Auslin is a resident scholar at AEI.