Yesterday Japan’s political
kingmaker, Ozawa Ichiro, was found not guilty of violating the Political
Funds Control Law.
In a confusing decision reminiscent
of the Scottish practice of allowing rulings of not only ‘Guilty’ and ‘Not
Guilty’ but also ‘Not Proven’, the Tokyo District Court on 26 April found
Ichiro Ozawa not guilty of conspiring to violate the Political Funds Control
Law, while maintaining that Ozawa did allow the filing of misleading
political fund account reports in his name. The judge also stated that he
personally found it hard to believe Ozawa’s claim that he, Ozawa, had not
viewed the reports before they were filed.
The verdict is largely irrelevant. As Toko
Sekiguchi of the Wall Street Journal points out, Ozawa would have appealed if he
was found guilty. Found not guilty, the Association of Those Seeking the Truth
(Shinjitsu o Motomeru Kai) failed in its quest to milk the arrest of
Okubo Takanori for some evidence to put Ozawa away. Given that the members of
this group, whoever they are, all seem to be in retirement and thus with plenty
of time on their hands to cause mischief (the Devil makes work for idle hands,
after all) it is likely the Association will just find another blind alley to
send prosecutors running down.
Whatever the purported goals of the
cases against Ozawa and his aides, the political purpose has been served. The
arrest of Okubo forced Ozawa to resign as head of the Democratic Party of Japan
on the eve of the election that was to push the Liberal Democratic Party off
its perch and install a DPJ-led coalition government. The resignation as party
leader prevented Ozawa becoming prime minister. While Ozawa was able to
engineer the election of his ally-puppet Hatoyama Yukio as his replacement,
with Ozawa taking the role of effective party leader through the post of DPJ
Secretary-General, Ozawa was denied the prize which he had long desired and had
long laboured to seize. As for the arrests of former aides Ishikawa Tomohiro
and Ikeda Mitsutomo, on the basis of evidence of violations of the Political
Funds Control Law found by the prosecutors after a thorough search through
the documents seized in relation to Okubo’s arrest, these weakened Ozawa’s
position in the party, making it possible for middle-level legislators to
challenge his stranglehold on party policy making.
Ozawa’s indictment on 31 January
2011 gave the anti-Ozawa members of the DPJ, including then-Prime Minister Kan
Naoto, the leverage needed to force party secretary-general Koshi’ishi Azuma,
an Ozawa ally, to suspend Ozawa’s party privileges.
Stripped of all formal party
positions and even access to party funds for his own re-election, Ozawa had to
exercise influence indirectly through the first-term and second-term
legislators in the House of Representatives and the House of Councillors whom
he had hand-picked as candidates, and through the largely second- and
third-grade legislators who had followed him through party after party. These
nominal disciples number about 150 legislators, a third of the DPJ’s membership
in the Diet.
Without his hands on the money
spigots of the party, particularly the public financing provided to finance elections,
Ozawa has had to rely on the bonds of affection, loyalty and his own funding apparatus
to keep his allies faithful. This bond has weakened, as Ozawa’s time in
internal exile has dragged on. On issues of policy, such as opposition to the
Trans-Pacific Partnership and the rise in the consumption tax, he has had to
ally himself with other disaffected elements of the party, such as Mr
No-To-Everything, Yamada Masahiko. He also found himself, in June 2011, on the
verge of joining hands with the LDP, the party he had worked so hard to unseat
and dismantle, in a vote of no-confidence against Prime Minister Kan. Only a
last-minute and ultimately empty face-saving compromise worked out by the
feckless Hatoyama prevented Ozawa from fulfilling the media’s negative
portrayal of him as a selfish destroyer of parties and governments.
Even this indirect influence over
party policy making has evaporated. In a show of principle and utter political
naïveté, Ozawa’s allies in the DPJ dragged out the party debate over the
legislation raising the consumption tax from a projected three days to three
weeks. Exasperated, Prime Minister Noda Yoshihiko cut off debate, giving
the final decision on the legislation to Policy Research Chairman Maeda Seiji —
an outcome that effectively negated the entire three weeks of debate. In
response, four of Ozawa’s acolytes in government positions and 30 in party
positions resigned their posts. Eager to preserve party unity, the party
leadership refused to accept the resignations, giving the legislators and Ozawa
a chance to reconsider their actions. After six days of waiting, the government
accepted the resignations of the government appointees on 5 April. It still
left the door open, though, for those who had resigned party posts.
The party very quietly shut that
final door on Monday, accepting resignations of the Ozawa allies who had
resigned their party posts.
So as the political commentariat and
twitterati awaited the verdict with bated breath, the political impact of the
outcome is less significant than political observers will admit. Ozawa is now
more shadow than shadow shogun. The current leadership group, knowing his
tendencies, will not permit his appointment to any position of power. He will
not be allowed near the party’s pot of political funds. His followers have
abandoned the positions they could have used to influence or if necessary gum
up policy making.
Ozawa has been the most influential, hated and fascinating
Japanese politician of the last 30 years. What happened yesterday will not
shake the political world to its roots; its branches may shiver a bit — but
that is all.
Michael Cucek is a Research
Associate at the MIT Centre
for International Studies and the author of the Shisaku
blog on Japanese politics and society.
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