Tokyo: Millions of Japanese braved typhoon
conditions today for a snap election likely to hand Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe a fresh mandate to revive the world's
third-largest economy and press his hardline stance on North
Korea.
If pre-election surveys prove correct, Abe's conservative
coalition will cruise to a crushing majority to win a fresh
term at the helm of the key US regional ally and Asian
economic powerhouse.
Polling stations opened across the country at 7:00am
(local time) with voters battling high winds and driving rain
as an election-day typhoon barrelled towards Japan.
Analysts say that if the weather affects turnout, it is
likely to benefit Abe, whose conservative voters are more
determined, putting the nationalist blueblood on course to
become the country's longest-serving leader.
"I support Abe's stance not to give in to North Korea's
pressure," one voter, Yoshihisa Iemori, said as he cast his
ballot in Tokyo.
"I'm focusing on this point for the election," the 50-
year-old construction firm owner told AFP.
The near-constant drizzle throughout the campaign has not
dampened the enthusiasm of hundreds of doughty, sash-wearing
parliamentary hopefuls, who have driven around in minibuses
pleading for votes via loudspeaker and bowing deeply to every
potential voter.
But with little doubt over the eventual result, the
suspense lies in whether Abe's Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)
and its junior coalition partner will retain its two-thirds
majority in the lower house.
Such a "supermajority" would allow Abe to propose changes
to Japan's US-imposed constitution that forces it to
"renounce" war and effectively limits its military to a self-
defence role.
Ballot boxes close at 8:00 pm (local time) when
broadcasters publish generally reliable exit polls.
Abe shocked Japan by calling the snap election a year
earlier than expected, urging voters to stick with him in the
face of what he termed the dual "national crises" of an ageing
population and North Korean tensions.
Pyongyang has cast a menacing shadow over the short 12-
day campaign, after it lobbed two missiles over the northern
island of Hokkaido and threatened to "sink" Japan into the
sea.
Nationalist Abe has taken a hawkish line during the
crisis, binding Japan to the US stance that "all options" are
on the table to counter Pyongyang's nuclear threat and urging
maximum pressure via sanctions.
"When North Korea is purposefully threatening us and
increasing tension, we must not waver," an animated Abe
stressed at his final campaign rally.
"We must not yield to the threat of North Korea."
Observers say North Korea's sabre-rattling has helped
Abe, 63, as voters tend to plump for the incumbent at times of
heightened tension.
Despite a clear lead in the polls, Abe enjoys only
lukewarm support in the country and critics say he called the
election to divert attention from a series of scandals that
dented his popularity.
Voter Etsuko Nakajima, 84, told AFP: "I totally oppose
the current government. Morals collapsed. I'm afraid this
country will be broken."
"I think if the LDP takes power, Japan will be in danger.
He does not do politics for the people," added the pensioner.
But Abe faces a weak and fractured opposition in the
shape of two parties that have only existed for a few weeks,
the Party of Hope created by Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike and
the centre-left Constitutional Democratic Party.
Koike, 65, threatened to shake up Japan's sleepy
landscape with her new party, vowing to do away with old-
school politics and vested interests.
But after days of wall-to-wall media coverage for the
former TV presenter, the bubble burst and Koike's popularity
ratings plunged, mainly because she declined to run herself in
the election.
"As it turned out, the Party of Hope is hopeless," said
Michael Cucek from Temple University.
Koike herself was even in Japan on election day, choosing
to visit Paris for an event in her capacity as Tokyo Governor.
The centre-left Constitutional Democratic Party may
benefit from her decline and could become the second biggest
party.
Despite the threat from North Korea, many voters feel the
economy is a more pressing issue, as the prime minister's
trademark "Abenomics" policy has had limited success in
returning Japan to its former glories.