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| Junichiro Koizumi (C), Japanese PM and head of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), speaks during a running campaign held by the party in Yokohama on August 30, 2005. The 12-day running campaigns kicked off on Tuesday for the elections of Japan's House of Representatives. (Xinhua Photo) |
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| Tsuneo Suzuki (R), a candidate of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), meets with female supporters during an election campaign held by the party in Yokohama, Japan, on August 30, 2005. (Xinhua Photo) |
TOKYO, Aug. 30 (Xinhuanet) -- Official campaigning for Japan's Sept. 11 general election kicked off Tuesday with voters being asked to choose between a government led by Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's ruling coalition and one led by the main opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ).
Koizumi, DPJ President Katsuya Okada and other party
leaders are set to deliver their first speeches on the streets in Tokyo and
other places as the 12-day campaigning got under way for the House of
Representatives election.
According to Kyodo News, more than 1,130 candidates
are expected to file their candidacies for the 480-seat lower chamber with
election boards nationwide Tuesday. The figure is slightly below the 1,159
candidates in the previous election in November 2003.
Koizumi dissolved the lower chamber to call the
election on Aug.8 as bills to privatize Japan Post, the centerpiece of his
policy agenda, failed to clear the parliament with a larger-than-expected number
of Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) members opposing them in the House of
Councillors following their passage in the lower house in July.
Koizumi has said he will serve until his LDP
presidency expiresin September next year. If his coalition wins a majority in
the election, he will hand over leadership to someone who supports his reform
agenda, he says.
Opposition leader Okada wants to wrest power from the
LDP and form a DPJ-led government. He has pledged to pull Japanese troops out of
Iraq by December and try to mend fences with China and South Korea.
Upon the chamber's dissolution, the LDP held 249
seats, its partner New Komeito 34, the DPJ 175, the other two smaller parties15.
The LDP has maintained its grip on Japan for the past
50 years,except for 11 months from July 1993. But the DPJ has been making
inroads and in the 2003 election the opposition party did better than the LDP in
proportional-representation votes. Enditem |