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    Japan
     Oct 4, 2008
Blood thickens Japan's political waters
By Kosuke Takahashi

TOKYO - Considering the revolving door of prime ministers who keep resigning after very short tenures, Japanese politics has long been viewed as mediocre at best, both by those at home and abroad.

Why does political turmoil continue in Tokyo? The answer may be simple. Preppy Japanese politicians fail to grasp the public mindset and have little knowledge of the tasks people on the street most expect the government to fulfill. Also, when times get tough, they spinelessly relinquish the reins of government. This angers ordinary Japanese, who clearly cannot abandon their jobs and are forced to tighten their belts.

Behind the dysfunctional politics of the world's second-largest

 

economy is a well-entrenched hereditary system.

A widening disparity between the haves and have-nots and an accumulated discrepancy between society's winners and losers are aggravating the situation. Tokyo now appears to be implementing the quasi-feudalism of the Edo Era (1603-1867), defined by a social class determined by birth, lineage or family wealth. The prospect of a return to this class-based system has more than a few Japanese seriously worried.

In the fledgling administration of Prime Minister Taro Aso, hastily created after his predecessor Yasuo Fukuda's abrupt resignation last month, 12 of the 18 ministers have fathers or grandfathers who were Diet (parliament) lawmakers. They inherited a constituency by succession when their antecessors died or retired from politics.

"Those hereditary politicians were born and grew up in a political family, and after working for just a few years outside, they became successors," said Yoshiaki Kobayashi, professor of political science at Keio University in Tokyo. "They only knew the political world and do not know other worlds well, namely, the suffering, hardships and wishes of our everyday life. Therefore, there emerge some gaps between them and us."

Too many prime ministers
Even more noteworthy is that four ministers in the Aso administration had fathers or grandfathers who were prime ministers. Aso himself is related to seven former prime ministers, including his grandfather Shigeru Yoshida, Japan's first post-war prime minister. New Foreign Minister Hirofumi Nakasone is the eldest son of former premier Yasuhiro Nakasone, who was best known for his close relationship with former United States president Ronald Reagan, popularly called the "Ron-Yasu" friendship.

Kunio Hatoyama, the new minister of internal affairs and communications, is the grandson of Ichiro Hatoyama, the first president of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and three times prime minister between 1954 and 1956. Yuko Obuchi, minister of state for the declining birthrate issue, is the second daughter of late premier Keizo Obuchi, whom the New York Times nicknamed "Cold Pizza".

The Aso administration is made of a who's who of celebrity families in Japan. Additionally, the father of Fukuda and the grandfather of Shinzo Abe, Fukuda's immediate predecessors were both former prime ministers. In fact, there are simply too many high-profile hereditary politicians to list.

What this means is that without the strong political advantage provided by famous family pedigrees, many Japanese politicians can no longer hope to become a premier or a minister by scaling the ladder of career success. This is even true within the ranks of the LDP.

Koizumi clan
Most recently, even popular former prime minister Junichiro Koizumi, 66, a symbol of Japan's reformist policy and a third-generation lawmaker, named his second-eldest son, Shinjiro, 27, to run in his constituency after he expressed his intention last week to retire from politics once his current term in the Lower House ends. The national election is expected to be held in coming months.

Through the privatization of postal services, his highest priority during his term of office, Koizumi succeeded in eradicating postmasters who enjoyed hereditary succession to their positions. In contrast, he maintained Japan's traditional politics of inheritance by preserving his constituency for his son.

According to the Institute for Mass Communication and Public Opinion, a Tokyo-based research institute, 38.5% of the politicians in the Lower House were hereditary politicians as of 2005. The ratio of hereditary politicians accounted for 51.6% of the LDP and 27.3% of the main opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ). The re-election rate for candidate exceeded a staggering 90% in the 2003 Lower House election, the institute said.

"The number of hereditary politicians has increased through recent Lower House elections," said Satoko Tadokoro, a spokeswoman at the institute. "For them, the hereditary transfer of their own constituency should be very convenient to defend their vested interests."

One of the major reasons why hereditary politicians are rampant lies in the Lower House election system which combines 300 small, single-seat districts with 180 proportional representation seats from 11 regional blocs around the nation. Japan modeled this after the United Kingdom's electoral system and has used it since 1996, replacing the old system of electing Diet members from medium-sized districts.

The old system was abolished because it usually led to two or more candidates from the same party running in the same constituency. The candidates therefore campaigned with more stress on pork-barrel politics, benefiting local interests or particular industries rather than on the basic policies of their parties.

Although the UK prohibited the practice of inheriting a constituency from one's father, grandfather or other blood relative by party discipline, Japan did not. Under this system, second- or third-generation politicians, especially in the ruling LDP, easily inherit what the Japanese call the "three bans" from constituents: jiban (electoral power base), kanban (name recognition) and kaban (political donations). Japan has lacked the concept of fairness providing anybody with equality of opportunity to run for elections on a level playing field.

Keio University's Kobayashi pointed out that prefectural assembly members of the same clan play a central role in deciding the succession in collaboration with the candidate's family.

Faced with a lack of the "three bans", the opposition DPJ has adopted an open application system to attract talented candidates and add credibility to the party. This is one of the major reasons why the DPJ has strengthened its position in the Diet and is threatening the LDP's half century of dominance as the governing party.

"Frankly, as long as we cherish hereditary politicians, we cannot put up candidates as good as the DPJ," Chuichi Date, a ruling LDP Upper House member with a 23-year political career, told Asia Times Online. "We need to change it."

A gap-widening society
Post-World War II Japan has been described by experts as a 90% middle class society. But recent data show a widening income gap. The number of employees earning an annual wage of 2 million yen (US$19,000) or less was 10.3 million in 2007, or about one out of every four workers. This number is up 21% from 2002, while those earning more than 10 million yen ($95,000) stood at 2.33 million, up 7%, according to statistics released last month by the National Tax Agency.

Wealth and privilege need not be political handicaps. In the United States, the Kennedy, Rockefeller and Bush families, among others, have proved that. Politicians born with silk stockings and silver spoons, if truly talented, can run and win in different constituencies from their parents and grandparents.

But in Japan, there are hardly any first-generation politicians such as US Democratic presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama or his Republican rival, Senator John McCain.

Kosuke Takahashi, a former staff writer at the Asahi Shimbun, is a freelance correspondent based in Tokyo. He can be contacted at letters@kosuke.net.

(Copyright 2008 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)


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