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Abe pledged his party’s stable leadership as he sought voters’ support, promising a tougher stance on North Korea, as well as social security reform to relieve burdens on younger generations in Japan’s rapidly aging society. “We should stay unwavering,” Abe said. “It is the policies, rather than a boom or slogans, that can open the future.”
As he did ahead of previous elections since taking office in late 2012, Abe traveled to Fukushima to appeal to voters affected by the nuclear disaster following the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in northern Japan. Experts say Abe timed his call for an election when opposition parties were unprepared to solidify his grip within the party and extend his rule.
Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party and its coalition partner, Komei, are expected to win a majority, though a surging new conservative group, the Party of Hope, led by Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike, and a liberal-leaning Constitutional Democratic Party are likely to take some seats away. The two new groups were created in the process of breaking up what used to be the main opposition Democratic Party.
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