Abe’s paramount goal is the
assertion and affirmation of Japan’s global status as a ‘first-tier nation’. He
has repeatedly emphasised that the foundation of any such role is a strong and
growing economy. Political stability in Tokyo is key if this ambition is to be
realised. While there is a certain ‘magical quality’ to that logic — at times
it sounds like stability alone is the tonic, since that will change the way the
Japanese people assess their future — a revolving door of prime ministers and
cabinet ministers makes policy consistency impossible. Even without personnel
turnover, the steady drip of scandal is a distraction, depriving the government
of time for policy debate, while eroding the legitimacy of the governing party
and government itself.
Political scientist Keiichi
Tsunekawa notes that between December 1954 and June 1989 the average tenure of
a Japanese prime minister was 1048 days. It declined to 549 days from
1989–2013, during which 13 of 16 prime ministers served for less than two
years. This average would be even shorter without former prime minister
Junichiro Koizumi who spent five and a half years in office. There have been 20
cabinets since 1998. In other words, the government has changed more than once
a year for nearly two decades. This revolving door in the Kantei,
argues Tsunekawa, is the primary cause of Japan’s lost decades.
Abe’s first term as prime
minister from 2006–07 is generally remembered for policy missteps and his
decision to step down for health reasons. But his term was also marked by three
scandals involving cabinet ministers, one of whom committed suicide. His return
to government in 2012 provided a stark contrast: the first Abe cabinet was in
office for nearly two years before there was a shift in personnel.
The December 2014 snap election was designed to lock
in political stability by ensuring another four years of Liberal Democratic
Party (LDP) rule. But, unfortunately, it appears as though old patterns are
reasserting themselves.
In the second Abe cabinet,
two ministers (both women) were forced to step down after being involved in
scandals regarding political donations. In February 2015, four more ministers
were accused of accepting tainted money. While denying any wrongdoing, one of
the four, the former agriculture minister Koya Nishikawa, has resigned to keep
from ‘disrupting’ the government.
Even the prime minister
himself has been touched. There are allegations that Abe’s LDP office accepted
donations from companies less than a year after they received government
subsidies, which is against the law. Fortunately for Abe, Katsuya Okada, head
of the opposition Democratic Party of Japan, also reportedly received funds
from a subsidiary of a company that received government funds.
None of the sums involved
are large — the donations to the prime minister’s LDP office just top US$5000
in total — and the charges centre on violations of the law, rather than
allegations of trading favours. Most observers concede the laws are arcane and
hard to follow.
Still, the scandals can have
an impact that outweighs the apparent misdeeds. The LDP has a deep bench and
can fill ministerial posts relatively easily. Reportedly Yoshimasa Hayashi, who
replaced Nishikawa, was in the prime minister’s office five minutes after the
cabinet post became vacant. Hayashi is an experienced legislator
with several previous stints in the cabinet. His last job was as Nishikawa’s
predecessor as minister of agriculture.
But Nishikawa was selected
specifically for the post of agriculture minister because of his close ties to
the agriculture lobby and his ability to help win approval for the Trans-Pacific
Partnership, which will require controversial changes to agricultural policy.
Given Abe’s agenda, any cabinet replacement
will thus be a suboptimal choice.
Then there is the ‘noise’
that surrounds these scandals. Scandals suck all the oxygen out of
parliamentary sessions, using time that should be devoted to critical matters
like the budget. If the government uses its majority to force votes, it appears
to be exercising the ‘tyranny of numbers’. If it lets the opposition objections
run their course, it not only loses time but it also looks like it cannot
control the legislative process.
Either way, the shield of
invincibility that has thus far surrounded the Abe government has been pierced.
The question now is whether Abe can restore the lustre to his government and
re-establish stability, which brings with it the ‘magical quality’ that by
itself helps convince the Japanese people that the tide has turned and a
brighter future is just around the corner. Failure on this count risks seeing
the drip of scandals become a flood, taking not only the Abe government with it
but also the hopes of many Japanese of a better, brighter tomorrow.
Brad Glosserman is executive
director of Pacific Forum CSIS and co-author with Scott Snyder of The Japan–Korea Identity Clash (forthcoming 2015).
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