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Parliament members applaud for the election of Shinzo Abe (2nd L Front)
as prime minister at the House of Representatives in Tokyo, Sept.
26, 2006. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery
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TOKYO,
Sept. 26 (Xinhua) -- The newly-elected president of Japan's ruling Liberal
Democratic Party (LDP) Shinzo Abe expectably won the vote in an extra Diet
session and was elected the country's new prime minister on Tuesday afternoon.
His earlier victory, with 339 votes out the some 480,
in the lower house, which holds the final say in picking a premier, was
corresponded in the upper house given the majorities enjoyed by the ruling bloc,
made up of the LDP and its coalition partner New Komeito party, in both houses.
As for the matter of procedures, even if the vote
result in the House of Representatives was opposed by the House of Councilors,
the former has the right to maintain its decision and Abe's victory will be
unchanged.
Ichiro Ozawa, president of major opposition
Democratic Party of Japan, won 115 votes in the upper house, Japanese Communist
Party leader Kazuo Shii garnered 9 votes, Social Democratic Party leader Mizuho
Fukushima obtained 7 votes, and People's New Party head Tamisuke Watanuki got 5
votes, leaving 1 vote blank and void.
In the House of Councillors vote, Abe sealed 136 of
all 240 votes, while Ozawa won 85, Shii gained 9, Fukushima received 6 and
Watanuki had 4.
BREAKING NOMINATION
TRADITION
The 52-year-old conservative hawk, who is a grandson
of a former prime minister and son of a former foreign minister, has now become
Japan's youngest postwar prime minister and the first premier born after World
War II.
Abe, who sealed a landslide victory in the LDP
presidential race on Sept. 20 and had been set to succeed Junichiro Koizumi,
will announce the lineup of his Cabinet later in the afternoon.
Sources indicated that former Senior Vice Foreign
Minister Yasuhisa Shiozaki is likely to be nominated chief Cabinet secretary,
the post of top government spokesman which will be concurrently given the
assignment to handle the issue of abductions of Japanese nationals by the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
Former Foreign Minister Taro Aso will resume his post
or be given another key Cabinet post, sources close to Abe said.
Abe has indicated that in choosing the Cabinet
ministers, he will break traditions of faction balance and appoint members who
support his policies and are suitable for their respective posts, according to
Kyodo News.
After an attestation ceremony at the Imperial Palace,
Abe will give his first news conference as premier in the evening.
TOUGH AND
UNCOMPROMISING
Abe started his political career as his father's
secretary in 1982 and debuted in Japanese political circles in 1993, winning a
House of Representatives seat by running in a constituency in Yamaguchi
Prefecture. He was appointed deputy chief Cabinet secretary in the second
Cabinet of Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori in 2000.
In 2002, as Japan's chief negotiator on the issue of
abductions of Japanese nationals by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea,
Abe impressed the Japanese public with his tough and uncompromising attitude.
He was nominated LDP secretary general in 2003 and became a Cabinet member for the first time in the post of chief Cabinet secretary in Junichiro Koizumi's third Cabinet in 2005.
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