'General Election Defeat' Japan's Ishiba Approval Rating Plummets to 32%... Drops 18%p in One Month
52.2% Hold the Opinion of Not Supporting
Prime Minister Ishiba of Japan campaigning for the general election. Photo by Yonhap News
View original imageSupport for the Ishiba Shigeru Japanese Cabinet has dropped by nearly 20 percentage points just one month after its launch.
Kyodo News reported on the 29th, "According to an emergency telephone poll conducted on the 28th and 29th among 1,063 voters immediately following the House of Representatives election held on the 27th, the approval rating for the Ishiba Cabinet was 32.1%."
This is 18.6 percentage points lower than the 50.7% cabinet approval rating from a survey conducted over two days starting from the 1st of this month, when Prime Minister Ishiba took office.
According to this survey, 52.2% expressed disapproval of the Ishiba Cabinet. Regarding the continuation of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and Komeito coalition government, which failed to secure a majority in the general election, 53.0% responded that they "do not want" it to continue. Only 38.4% wished for the LDP-Komeito coalition to persist.
Among respondents, 91.4% said that the LDP's "slush fund scandal" influenced the ruling party's total seats plummeting from 279 to 215. Additionally, 72.5% expected that the political funding issues would not be eradicated as a result of the election. Furthermore, 79.2% opposed appointing lawmakers involved in the slush fund issue to key positions.
However, regarding whether Prime Minister Ishiba should take responsibility for failing to secure a majority and resign, 65.7% said "resignation is not necessary."
Hot Picks Today
"It Has Now Crossed Borders": No Vaccine or Treatment as Bundibugyo Ebola Variant Spreads [Reading Science]
- [Breaking] Samsung Electronics Management: "Tentative Agreement Will Be a Starting Point for a Cooperative Labor-Management Culture"
- "Was It You Again?" Elementary Student Involved in Last Week's Vehicle Theft Drives Off Himself This Time
- "Stocks Are Not Taxed, but Annual Crypto Gains Over 2.5 Million Won to Be Taxed Next Year... Investors Push Back"
- "Who Is Visiting Japan These Days?" The Once-Crowded Tourist Spots Empty Out... What's Happening?
Meanwhile, the LDP and Komeito are considering cooperating with some opposition parties such as the Democratic Party for the People to maintain the administration. The largest opposition party, the Constitutional Democratic Party, whose seats surged from 98 to 148, is also seeking alliances with other opposition parties. The Japanese government and ruling parties plan to hold an election in the Diet on the 11th of next month to select the next prime minister.
© The Asia Business Daily(www.asiae.co.kr). All rights reserved.