TOKYO (AP) — Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, in a surprise move Wednesday, announced he will not run in the upcoming party leadership vote in September, paving the way for Japan to have a new prime minister.
Kishida was elected president of his governing Liberal Democratic Party and became prime minister in 2021. His three-year term expires in September and whoever wins the party vote will succeed him as prime minister because the LDP controls both houses of parliament. A new face is a chance for the party to show that it’s changing for the better, and Kishida said he will support the new leader.
“We need to clearly show an LDP reborn,” Kishida told a news conference on Wednesday. “In order to show a changing LDP, the most obvious first step is for me to bow out.”
“I will not run for the upcoming party leadership election,” he said.
Stung by his party’s corruption scandals, Kishida has suffered dwindling support ratings that have dipped below 20 percent.
Regaining public trust in politics is crucial for tackling difficult situations in and outside Japan, he said and called on aspiring party lawmakers to run for leadership and hold active policy debates during the campaign.
“Once a new leader is decided, I hope to see everyone unite and form a dream team to achieve politics that can gain public understanding,” he said.
Kishida said he has been mulling the resignation for some time but waited to put his key policies on track, including an energy policy that calls for a return to nuclear power, a drastic military buildup to deal with security threats in the region, and improving ties with South Korea, as well as political reforms.
President Joe Biden lauded Kishida’s leadership as historic, saying the two of them have worked together to take the U.S.-Japan alliance “to new heights.”
“Guided by unflinching courage and moral clarity, Prime Minister Kishida has transformed Japan’s role in the world,” Biden said in a statement, adding that Kishida’s “courageous leadership will be remembered on both sides of the Pacific for decades to come.”
The U.S Ambassador to Japan, Rahm Emanuel, also praised Kishida’s effort in elevating the U.S.-Japan alliance while also developing separate trilaterals, one with South Korea and another with the Philippines, in the face of China’s growing influence.
Biden and Kishida “literally wrote the organising chapter of the next era,” Emanuel said.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres had no comment on the announcement but UN deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said that “certainly, the secretary-general has been very pleased to be working with prime minister Kishida during his time in office.”
A number of senior LDP lawmakers are considered potential candidates, including Kishida’s rival and party Secretary-General Toshimitsu Motegi and former Defence Minister Shigeru Ishiba, a favorite among voters. Three others who challenged Kishida in the 2021 vote — Digital Minister Taro Kono, Economic Security Minister Sanae Takaichi and former Gender Equality Minister Seiko Noda — are also considered potential contenders.
A winner will replace Kishida as party president, and will be endorsed as the new prime minister in a parliamentary vote soon after. LDP executives are set to decide next week on the date for the party election, expected sometime between 20 September and 29 September…. PACNEWS
