No easy road for Abe agenda
Low voter turnout and public opposition spell trouble for prime minister's mandate
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's landslide election victory at the weekend was anything but a ringing endorsement from voters - the vast majority of whom never voted for his coalition.
Abe's mandate is much smaller than his ruling bloc's win in the upper house poll suggests, as only about one in four voters gave their support. Three-quarters of the electorate either did not vote at all or backed opposition parties.
The opposition, though, was badly fractured, with the Communist Party emerging as one unlikely beneficiary of those who felt unable to back Abe's Liberal Democratic Party-led coalition or the main opposition Democratic Party of Japan.
That means Abe - who returned to power in December promising to revive the stagnant economy, bolster Japan's defense posture and revise its pacifist constitution - may find that the only potential brake on his agenda comes from his dovish coalition partner and rivals inside his own LDP.
"The opposition is currently totally ineffective," said Chuo University political science professor Steven Reed.
"Neither the opposition nor public opinion is going to put a brake on his policies to any significant degree. The thing that will restrain him is the (coalition partner) New Komeito and the need to maintain unity in his own party."
Perhaps reflecting a sense of fait accompli among voters, turnout was just over 52 percent, more than five percentage points less than the previous turnout for upper house elections.
The LDP and its partner got just less than 50 percent of the total vote, and since only about half of eligible voters went to the polls, that means only one in four Japanese cast their ballots for the LDP-led bloc.
Nonetheless, the LDP and New Komeito won 76 of the 121 seats up for grabs in the 242-member upper house. Together with the coalition's uncontested 59 seats, that gave it a comfortable majority, raising the chances that Abe can stay in office until the next general election, which need not be held until 2016.
The Japanese leader's "Abenomics" recipe for reviving the economy has inspired a rare atmosphere of hope after decades of stagnation, bolstering support levels to around 60 percent.
"I think that through this election, the LDP's new stance has received a mandate," Abe told a news conference on Monday.
But media surveys show a disconnect between some of his key policies and the preferences of many voters.
The Tokyo Shimbun metropolitan newspaper said 42.9 percent were opposed to Abe's proposal to lower the hurdle for revising the US-drafted, post-war constitution by changing the charter's Article 96, which requires a two-thirds majority of both houses of parliament before a public referendum can be held. That compared to 37.5 percent in favor of the change.
Revising Article 96 would ease the path to revising the constitution's signature Article 9 to legitimize the military.
Almost 55 percent of voters oppose restarting nuclear reactors that went offline after the 2011 Fukushima disaster, the newspaper said, although the LDP wants those units to get up and running if they are confirmed safe by a new regulator.
Reuters