Opposition Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) leader Čedomir Jovanović said that his party has not prevented the collapse of the Serbian government. The ruling coalition has been shaken with disunity over proposed draft changes to the Law on Information.
Posts Tagged ‘LDP’
Promises, promises
One of the world’s most entrenched political parties faces the fight of its life in Japan
FOR more than half a century the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has ruled Japan, with only a brief hiatus in the early 1990s. But its monopoly on power is likely to end on August 30th. With less than month to go before general elections, it has issued a manifesto focused on bringing Japan’s economy—still the world’s second largest—back to health. But after years of broken promises, voters appear to be unimpressed, according to a poll published on Monday August 3rd by Asahi Shimbun. The newspaper suggests that the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) is almost twice as popular as the LDP.
The LDP promises to restore Japan to 2% growth by March 2011, create 2m new jobs in three years and boost household disposable income by YEN1m ($10,505) in a decade. The focus on the economy reflects the main anxiety of voters. Unemployment is at the highest level in six years and the spectre of deflation has re-emerged. Not only are consumer prices broadly falling, on Monday the government reported that cash wages fell in June at their fastest pace since 1990. …
“Early elections have no alternative”
Serbia has no alternative but to go to the polls early, opposition Serb Progressive Party (SNS) Vice-President Aleksandar VuÄić stated on Friday. He said the postponement of a parliament vote on a controversial media law, and an agreement reached by the DS, G17 Plus and LDP, all show that the state is in a “total chaos†and that it is clear new elections must take place as soon as possible.
Ruling coalition turns to opposition LDP
The Serbian parliament will vote on August 31 on 24 bills on which the debate ended on Wednesday. Parliament Speaker Slavica Äukić-Dejanović said yesterday that on August 31, MPs will vote for the bills which were on the agenda of the special session which began on July 16.
Japan PM apologises for failures
Japan’s Prime Minister Taro Aso has publicly apologised for what he called his failures and for his ruling party’s string of local election losses.
He spoke hours after dissolving parliament ahead of an early general election scheduled for 30 August.
Opinion polls suggest the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) could lose heavily to the opposition Democratic Party (DPJ) in the election.
A DPJ victory would end five decades of almost uninterrupted rule by the LDP.
‘"My shortcomings caused mistrust from the public and I apologise from my heart for this," Mr Aso said to his party’s legislators in a televised speech.
"I reflect humbly on this situation and will fulfil my responsibilities while keeping in mind the people who support the LDP."
He also apologised for a series of LDP defeats in local elections. It was after losing control of the Tokyo assembly two weeks ago that Mr Aso said he was calling an election for 30 August.
Declining support
Earlier on Tuesday, the cabinet gave its formal backing to Mr Aso’s plan to dissolve parliament.
ASO’S KEY MOMENTS- Sept 2008: Confirmed as PM
- Nov 2008: Causes outrage by saying doctors lack common sense
- Nov 2008: Alienates pensioners – a key constituency – by saying they "just eat and drink and make no effort"
- Feb 2009: Economics minister says Japan facing worst economic crisis since WWII
- April 2009: Introduces stimulus package after months of delay
- July 2009: Tokyo election loss – fourth in recent weeks. DPJ has at least 12 percentage point lead in opinion polls
Japan is in a deep recession and correspondents say that at times the prime minister has appeared indecisive.
Last week, Mr Aso survived a no-confidence motion put forward by the opposition in the lower house. But the upper house, which is dominated by the opposition, passed a similar motion.
LDP rebels tried unsuccessfully to remove him before he could dissolve parliament, believing he was leading them to a historic defeat.
Opinion polls published by the Asahi and Mainichi newspapers on Monday suggested that support for Mr Aso had continued to decline since previous surveys last month.
They showed him trailing Democratic Party leader Yukio Hatoyama.
Correspondents say the Democratic Party favours more independence from the US, a greater Japanese contribution to peacekeeping missions and a smaller role for government.
Mr Aso is the fourth prime minister since the party won the last election to the lower house of parliament in 2005.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Japanese PM dissolves parliament for election
Taro Aso criticised for leadership and handling of recession as ruling Liberal Democratic Party trails opposition with just 23% backing
The Japanese prime minister, Taro Aso, today dissolved parliament and called a general election for 30 August that could see his party cast out of power for only the second time in almost 55 years.
Racked with infighting and policy confusion during Aso’s 10 months in charge, the Liberal Democratic party [LDP] trails the main opposition Democratic Party of Japan [DPJ] in opinion polls by what many believe is an insurmountable margin.
Aso, the manga-addicted scion of a wealthy political dynasty, has presided over one of the LDP’s most miserable periods in power since he took office last September.
He has managed to insult teachers, the elderly and Alzheimer’s sufferers with ill-judged comments, at one point likening the opposition to the Nazis. His cabinet has been dogged by scandal, including the resignation in February of his finance minister, Shoichi Nakagawa, after he turned up drunk at a G8 press conference in Italy.
A poll in yesterday’s Mainichi newspaper put support for the DPJ at 56%, with 23% backing the LDP. At a meagre 11%, support for Aso trailed well behind that for the DPJ’s leader, Yukio Hatoyama, on 28%.
Though his party’s policies are short on detail, Hatoyama has struck a chord with disaffected voters with promises to take on the reform-resistant bureaucracy, lower taxes and set aside cash for families, the sick and the elderly.
The DPJ has also vowed to pursue a more independent foreign policy after decades of subservience to the US, and to increase its involvement in UN peacekeeping missions.
Hatoyama told party members that the election would be a “revolutionary” opportunity for politicians to wrest control from bureaucrats, who have dominated policymaking under the LDP. “We should face it with a sense of historic mission,” he said.
Japan has effectively been in a state of political paralysis since the DPJ took control of the upper house in 2007, giving it the ability to block and delay government legislation.
Yet despite its comfortable lead in the opinion polls, the DPJ are by no means assured of taking control of the more powerful lower house.
The LDP holds 303 seats in the 408-seat chamber – and its junior coalition partner New Komeito holds 31 – while the DPJ has just 112. The result, analysts say, will be determined by the roughly 30% of voters who remain undecided.
Aso, 68, has been criticised for his handling of Japan’s recession with the economy faring even worse than those of the US and the EU. Record stimulus packages have been derided as wasteful, at a time when Japan is lumbered with a public debt equivalent to 180% of its GDP.
His party also appears poorly equipped to address pressing social problems, including how to fund the creaking state pension and healthcare for the elderly.
Public disaffection with the LDP, one of the most successful electoral machines in modern political history, culminated in a resounding defeat at last weekend’s elections for the Tokyo assembly, the party’s first loss in the capital for 40 years.
That defeat triggered an attempt by LDP rebels to out Aso before the election, but the move was frustrated by party executives desperate to impose a semblance of unity in the run-up to the general election.
After insisting that the LDP’s drubbing in Tokyo was not an indictment of his administration, Aso apologised to party colleagues for his mistakes as leader.
“I’m sorry for my lack of ability and that I couldn’t fully unite the party,” he said. “We must sincerely accept the public’s criticism, humbly reflect on our performance and start afresh.”
Japan PM dissolves parliament

Japan’s Prime Minister Taro Aso is due to dissolve the lower house of parliament ahead of polls on 30 August, after gaining official cabinet backing.
Mr Aso called the elections early after his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) lost control of Tokyo’s municipal assembly.
Opinion polls suggest that the LDP could lose heavily to the opposition Democratic Party in the upcoming vote.
A win for the Democratic Party would end five decades of almost uninterrupted rule by the LDP.
On Tuesday morning, his cabinet gave its formal backing to Mr Aso’s plan, ahead of a parliamentary debate and vote due later in the day.
Japan is in a deep recession and correspondents say that at times the prime minister has appeared indecisive.
Last week, Mr Aso survived a no-confidence motion put forward by the opposition in the lower house. But the upper house, which is dominated by the opposition, passed a similar motion.
Mr Aso’s position had been further weakened after the LDP lost control of Tokyo city council in elections on 12 July.
LDP rebels had sought to remove him before he could dissolve parliament, believing he is leading them to an historic defeat.
Polls published by the Asahi and Mainichi newspapers on Monday suggested that support for Mr Aso had continued to decline since previous surveys last month.
They show him trailing Democratic Party leader Yukio Hatoyama.
Correspondents say the Democratic Party favours more independence from the US, a greater Japanese contribution to peacekeeping missions, and a smaller role for government.
Mr Aso is the fourth prime minister since the party won the last election to the more powerful lower house of parliament in 2005.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Chaos deepens in Japan’s ruling party before poll
Chaos deepened in Japan’s ruling party ahead of an expected August election, as MPs fearing a crushing defeat continued efforts to ditch unpopular PM Taro Aso. Opinion polls show the main opposition Democratic Party ahead of Aso’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), raising the prospect of an end to more than half a century of almost unbroken rule by the business-friendly conservatives.
Pressure remains on Japanese PM

Japan’s beleaguered Prime Minister Taro Aso has survived a no-confidence motion in the lower house of parliament.
But a non-binding censure motion has been adopted in the opposition-dominated upper house – heaping more pressure on Mr Aso.
Following his party’s loss of control of the Tokyo municipal assembly on Sunday, Mr Aso dissolved parliament and called a general election for August.
Defeat would end the LDP’s almost continuous rule for the past 50 years.
The prime minister is deeply unpopular, and there have been calls from within his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) for Mr Aso to stand down as leader before the poll.
DPJ’s hopes
Japan’s opposition put forward the motions to pile humiliation on Taro Aso, according to the BBC’s correspondent in Tokyo, Roland Buerk.
The leader of the opposition Democratic Party of Japan, Yukio Hatoyama, told parliament that the huge sums being spent trying to boost the recession-wracked economy looked like an attempt to buy electoral support.
The lower house of parliament, which is controlled by the LDP, easily voted down the motion of no confidence by 333 to 139.
But a similar motion was passed in the opposition-dominated upper house a few hours later.
Recent newspaper opinion polls have suggested that the DPJ is well-placed to make considerable gains in the August election.
Such polls also put Mr Hatoyama ahead of Mr Aso as the people’s choice for prime minister.
Are you in Japan What is your reaction to Taro Aso’s call for a general election in August Send us your views on the current political situation using the form below.</b
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Taro’s last card
Japan’s beleaguered prime minister calls an election
SINCE becoming Japan’s prime minister last September, Taro Aso has resisted calls to hold an early election. But the clamour from both his own team, the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), as well as the opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), became too loud to ignore. The LDP suffered a striking defeat in municipal elections in Tokyo on Sunday July 12th and, facing an open revolt from his own party, Mr Aso finally succumbed.
On Monday Mr Aso decided to call an election on August 30th to select members of the lower house of Japan’s Diet (parliament), which he plans to dissolve next week. The decision should quell moves from within the LDP to boot him out. But the decision could result in the ousting of the LDP; the party has governed Japan for more than 50 years. …
Blow to Japan’s PM in Tokyo poll
By Roland Buerk
BBC News, Tokyo

People in Tokyo are preparing to vote in local polls considered a key test of popularity for Prime Minister Taro Aso.
The polls in the capital come ahead of a general election which must be held by October.
Taro Aso, whose Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has governed for almost all the past half-century, has approval hovering around 20%.
The opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) is hoping to break the LDP’s grip on power.
Voters are deciding who will sit on Tokyo’s metropolitan assembly, but the stakes could be higher than that for Mr Aso.
If his LDP does badly, moves to oust him from the leadership could intensify.
In the run up to the vote in Tokyo candidates, wearing white gloves and sashes, toured the streets in vans using loudspeakers to campaign.
But many voters appeared largely indifferent.
Some candidates resorted to making speeches in front of deserted city car parks, their words echoing off the surrounding apartment blocks.
The LDP has governed Japan for the past half century, except for a break of less than a year in the 1990s.
But Mr Aso, who is the fourth prime minister since the last election to the more powerful lower house in 2005, has dismal approval ratings.
The opposition DPJ hopes to take power in the next general election, which must be held by October.
It is promising to break the grip of the bureaucracy on policy making, and increase social welfare measures.
But the opposition’s support has been eroded by fund raising scandals.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.



