Abe support falls as Koike steals spotlight

epa06225769 Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe delivers a press conference at his official residence in Tokyo, Japan, 25 September 2017. Prime Minister Abe said he will dissolve the Lower House of the parliament on 28 September and call for a general election to be held on 22 October 2017.  EPA-EFE/FRANCK ROBICHON

Bloomberg

Support for Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe fell in two polls released on Monday, three weeks before a general election where Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike’s new Party of Hope threatens to eat into his majority.
The premier’s approval rate dropped below his disapproval rate in polls by Kyodo News and the Asahi newspaper. Almost 46 percent of respondents to the Kyodo survey said they saw Abe as an appropriate person to be prime minister, compared with 33 percent who chose Koike, whose power base is largely in and around the capital.
About 24 percent said they’d vote for Abe’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party with nearly 15 percent opting for Koike’s party in the proportional representation section of the October 22 election. Forty-three percent said they hadn’t decided.
Abe called the snap election more than a year ahead of schedule, seeking to nip in the bud the challenge from Koike.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend