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New rules to reinforce environmental assessment workJapanese
PM dissolves lower house
2005-08-09
Related:
”¤Postal reform bills fail to clear Japan's upper house
”¤Chronology of Japanese PM's postal privatization bills
TOKYO, Aug. 8 (Xinhuanet) -- Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi
dissolved the lower house immediately after the postal reform bills
advocated by him failed to clear the upper house on Monday.
The premier has said he intended to have the general election
held on Sept. 11. The upper house is not subject to dissolution.
The bills were voted down in the upper house 125 against 108 asKoizumi's
drive had divided his ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) so heavily
that many party members joined the opposition parties to stop the
passage of the legislation.
A combined 30 LDP upper house members voted against postal bills
or abstained, well exceeding the 18 needed to kill the bills.
Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Minister Yoshinobu Shimamura
resigned to express his opposition to the dissolution. However,
Chief Cabinet Secretary Hiroyuki Hosoda told a press conference
after a cabinet meeting that Shimamura has been dismissed from his
post.
Shimamura said some other ministers also voiced opposition to
the lower house dissolution during the cabinet meeting, but Hosodarejected
the remarks, saying the decision was approved by all cabinet ministers
but Shimamura.
Also sacked was Parliamentary Defense Secretary Takeaki Kashimura.
Privatizing Japan's postal services has been one of Koizumi's
core policies. Under the plan, the mammoth body with some 270,000
employees will be split into four units to be run under a holding
company from April 2007, and become fully privatized entities in
10 years. He intends to spin off these public servants to relieve
the government of financial burden.
However, his ambition has met vehement resistance, not only from
the opposition parties, but also from his own ruling Liberal Democratic
Party.
The postal service system is one of the major supporting groupsfor
the party, thus has strong clout there.
They are worried that the privatization would deprive them of
stable payments and job posts. Opponents also argued that the privatization
could result in the closure of the bulk of post offices, particularly
in rural, depopulated areas where many LDP supporters reside.
The major opposition Domestic Party of Japan is opposed to the
government-proposed privatization on the grounds that it might result
in the creation of a massive government-affiliated conglomerate
offering postal, financial, distribution and retail services that
would weigh heavily on their respective private-sector competitors.
In order to gain over party opponents, Koizumi even threatened
to dismiss the lower house and call a snap general election. In
such case, the ruling party could encounter a tough war as the DPJhad
demonstrated a rapid growth in political strength in the previous
lower house election in 2003 and the upper house electionlast year.
None of the two sides compromised. Opponents within the LDP rejected
last-ditch lobbies from Koizumi's supporters after the bills cleared
the lower house in July with a narrow margin of fivevotes. Koizumi,
meanwhile, adamantly insisted on the dissolution despite some party
heavyweights, including former Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori, who
is a party faction leader and Koizumi's major backer.
The determined premier said that he would pursue the postal reform
to the end, even if at the cost of life.
After learning the bills have been rejected, Koizumi reportedlysaid
that the LDP would not throw back behind on rebels in the upcoming
general election, and vowed to destroy the old LDP to give it a
new life.
The DPJ showed confidence for a good result in the lower house
election. Party leader Katsuya Okada vowed that his party would
end ruling of the LDP for over 50 years.
New Komeito party leader Takenori Kanzaki said that his party
will continue cooperation with the LDP, but admitted that it wouldbe
difficult to win in the election.
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