How
likely is constitutional change in Japan?
Following
the 10 July upper house elections the Abe government now has the two-thirds
majority in both houses of the Diet necessary to pass constitutional
amendments. So what are the likely consequences?
Four years
ago, Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) published a set of proposals
for changing the nation’s postwar constitution. Like its earlier draft changes
of 2005, they failed to muster enough support to be turned into legislation,
let alone come to a vote.
Although the
new numbers in the Diet make
constitutional change now possible, there are a number of reasons
why it should not be regarded as imminent or inevitable. First of all, any
amendments would still have to be approved by a national referendum. A move to
strike out Article 9, the clause renouncing war, for instance, would certainly
meet stiff resistance since it is an integral part of Japan’s postwar identity
as a ‘nation of peace’. Less controversial changes, on the other hand, might be
sold to the public.
The current
constitution was drafted in 1946 by the US-led occupation authority as it went
about disarming and democratising the former enemy. In the 70 years since, the
constitution has never been amended, although its pacifist stance has been
‘reinterpreted’ to justify the existence of Japan’s Self-Defense Forces (backed
today by the world’s 8th biggest defence budget). When the Abe government moved
last September to expand the scope of self-defence to include limited forms of
‘collective self-defence’ — allowing the military to go to the aid of an ally
if Japan were also threatened — large-scale public protests erupted against what
many saw as constitutional revision without due process.
Campaigning
on behalf of candidates for the upper house, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
generally avoided the constitutional issue and stuck to economic themes. The
combined opposition parties, in contrast, put the constitution front and
centre, asking voters to stop the ruling bloc from gaining the crucial
two-thirds majority. Abe’s victory could mean the electorate has either grown
tired of the constitutional controversy or is more concerned about having a
steady hand on the tiller. Both, of course, could be true.
Some
commentators believe the Abe government will be fully occupied trying to revive
a sluggish economy and won’t want to venture into the minefield of
constitutional law. Some senior LDP executives and business leaders are also
advising caution. Abe remains committed to revision but concedes the need for
deeper discussion on what might be changed and how.
The LDP’s
coalition partner, Komeito, would also have to be convinced first, given its
long-standing commitment to the status quo.
The LDP’s
draft new constitution contains so many problematic changes — including
enhancing the status of the Emperor, reducing the importance of the individual
versus the state, increasing the power of the executive branch of government
and ending the strict separation of church and state — it is highly unlikely
the public would swallow it whole. A smarter approach, and one already gaining
some momentum, would narrow the focus and include less controversial proposals
(for instance, adding a ‘right to privacy’ to the constitution). Retaining most
of Article 9 — removing only the reference to disarmament — would also have a
greater chance of being accepted.
An exit poll
conducted by the Asahi Shimbun in conjunction with the upper
house election found more voters favoured (unspecified) constitutional change
than opposed it, albeit by a narrow margin. An exit poll by the Jiji news
agency obtained the opposite result, although one-third of its respondents were
‘unsure’. These surveys sampled the 55 per cent of the electorate who actually
turned out to vote — the politically active component of the population the LDP
would need in a referendum.
If there has
been a shift in the public mood, it could be because a lot has happened since
last September: more Japanese have died in terrorist atrocities abroad, China
has stepped up its belligerent approach to territorial disputes, North Korea
has test-fired ballistic missiles, and US presidential candidate Donald
Trump has put Japan on notice to provide for its own defence. The
US–Japan alliance was further frayed by the murder of a young woman by a US
base employee in Okinawa. At a time of great unease, public approval for the
Abe cabinet has rebounded 11 percentage points (to 48 per cent) from its low point
of a year ago.
Abe has the
remaining two years of his term as party president to fulfil his deeply held
ambition to replace Japan’s US-imposed constitution with one reflecting
traditional, indigenous values. The prospects for revision may come down to a
choice between pragmatism and ideology: whether the revisionists are prepared
to revert to a minimalist approach — essentially to establish a precedent for
change — or risk everything trying for root-and-branch reform. The ruling bloc
may be a step closer to the glittering prize, but this new opportunity brings
with it a greater risk of hubris.
Walter
Hamilton was the ABC’s Tokyo correspondent for 11 years
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