Noda emerges as rival to Japan PM
JAPANESE Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda emerged yesterday as a frontrunner to replace the increasingly unpopular Prime Minister Naoto Kan, possibly this month.
But even if the 54 year-old - the voice of fiscal discipline in the ruling party - does get the job, some doubt he will do any better than Kan in forming an alliance with the opposition to break the political impasse blocking policies to deal with a nuclear disaster and huge public debt.
The Asahi newspaper said senior ruling Democratic Party officials wanted to nominate Noda as candidate in a party leadership election when Kan steps down, possibly later this month, and that Noda himself is keen to run.
Kan, in office for one year as Japan's fifth prime minister in as many years, last week survived a no-confidence vote by saying he would step down. But he did not specify when.
Rivals in his own party as well as the opposition want him out this month, clearing the way for a coalition with the main opposition Liberal Democratic Party.
Many view a "grand coalition" as the best chance to break the logjam in parliament, where the opposition controls the upper house, and secure funding for Japan's biggest rebuilding efforts since the years after World War II.
Noda declined to comment when asked about the Asahi report.
"The prime minister needs to negotiate with the opposition to pass the debt-issuance bill and shouldn't take a day longer to resign. To do so would be for the benefit of the country and for disaster management," party elder Kozo Watanabe said.
Noda has backed Kan's push for tax reforms, including a sales tax hike, to fund the rising social security costs of an ageing population and rein in the debt, which at twice the US$5 trillion economy is the worst among advanced economies. "Markets will like Noda as prime minister. He will try to push through tax hikes and fiscal reforms," said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchukin Research Institute.
"But ruling party lawmakers themselves cannot agree on anything. I don't see how ruling and opposition parties could start to work together, even under Noda."
Whoever succeeds Kan will have to cope with the aftermath of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that triggered a radiation crisis at Tokyo Electric's Fukushima nuclear plant.
In the latest sign that the struggle to bring Japan's economy back on its feet was far from over, trade ministry officials warned that all 54 of the nation's nuclear reactors could be shut by next April.
That would inflate Japan's energy costs and pose a risk to the nascent recovery from its second recession in three years.
But even if the 54 year-old - the voice of fiscal discipline in the ruling party - does get the job, some doubt he will do any better than Kan in forming an alliance with the opposition to break the political impasse blocking policies to deal with a nuclear disaster and huge public debt.
The Asahi newspaper said senior ruling Democratic Party officials wanted to nominate Noda as candidate in a party leadership election when Kan steps down, possibly later this month, and that Noda himself is keen to run.
Kan, in office for one year as Japan's fifth prime minister in as many years, last week survived a no-confidence vote by saying he would step down. But he did not specify when.
Rivals in his own party as well as the opposition want him out this month, clearing the way for a coalition with the main opposition Liberal Democratic Party.
Many view a "grand coalition" as the best chance to break the logjam in parliament, where the opposition controls the upper house, and secure funding for Japan's biggest rebuilding efforts since the years after World War II.
Noda declined to comment when asked about the Asahi report.
"The prime minister needs to negotiate with the opposition to pass the debt-issuance bill and shouldn't take a day longer to resign. To do so would be for the benefit of the country and for disaster management," party elder Kozo Watanabe said.
Noda has backed Kan's push for tax reforms, including a sales tax hike, to fund the rising social security costs of an ageing population and rein in the debt, which at twice the US$5 trillion economy is the worst among advanced economies. "Markets will like Noda as prime minister. He will try to push through tax hikes and fiscal reforms," said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchukin Research Institute.
"But ruling party lawmakers themselves cannot agree on anything. I don't see how ruling and opposition parties could start to work together, even under Noda."
Whoever succeeds Kan will have to cope with the aftermath of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that triggered a radiation crisis at Tokyo Electric's Fukushima nuclear plant.
In the latest sign that the struggle to bring Japan's economy back on its feet was far from over, trade ministry officials warned that all 54 of the nation's nuclear reactors could be shut by next April.
That would inflate Japan's energy costs and pose a risk to the nascent recovery from its second recession in three years.
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