AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

The Prime Minister Vanishes.(World Affairs)(Yasuo Fukuda)

Newsweek International

| April 07, 2008 | Caryl, Christian; Kashiwagi, Akiko | COPYRIGHT 2008 Newsweek, Inc. All rights reserved. Any reuse, distribution or alteration without express written permission of Newsweek is prohibited. For permission: www.newsweek.com. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Byline: Christian Caryl and Akiko Kashiwagi

As Japan's economy stalls, Yasuo Fukuda has gone missing in action.

Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda couldn't have made it any clearer. Appearing before the cameras on March 24, he declared: "I don't understand what's going on." Of course, he didn't mean it in a general sense--Fukuda was referring to his difficulty comprehending the obstreperous opposition. But the remark, taken on its own, served as a neat indictment of his short but very troubled tenure.

That's certainly how Japanese voters heard it: the latest opinion polls put Fukuda's approval rating at a dismal 31 percent. Even members of his own party are starting to whisper that it's time for the caretaker prime minister, appointed last September, to go. It would be one thing if he'd alienated the public by making aggressive moves. Japan today is in real trouble, what with the worldwide

financial crisis, a sputtering domestic economy--the jobless rate just hit 3.9 percent, the first spike in five months--and a mounting list of pressing political challenges. Many Japanese would therefore have forgiven bold attempts at reform. But unlike the can-do pragmatists sweeping into office elsewhere in Asia, Fukuda has offered little more than drift. "This government is pretty much bereft of ideas," says Tobias Harris, who has worked as an aide in the Japanese Parliament and now writes a blog on Tokyo politics. "It hasn't articulated any clear way forward."

Not only has he failed to offer an agenda, Fukuda can't even seem to avoid tripping over his own feet. While U.S. and European central bankers were meeting and mobilizing recently in an effort to stem the global credit crunch, Japan under Fukuda was stumbling around trying to find a central banker. The last governor of the Bank of Japan left office when his term expired on March 19. Despite the need for a strong hand--or any hand--at the helm, Fukuda's ruling Liberal Democratic Party has done little more than squabble over nominees with the opposition Democratic Party of Japan (which now controls the Parliament's upper house). No sooner did DPJ grandees announce that candidates for the Bank of Japan job should come from outside the powerful Finance Ministry (to ensure their independence) than Fukuda proceeded to nominate not one but two Finance Ministry alums, whom the DPJ duly blocked. The result: the central monetary authority of the world's second largest economy still lacks a permanent leader.

Things weren't supposed to work out this way. When Fukuda took office following the abrupt resignation of his predecessor, Shinzo Abe, supporters saw him as a safe pair of hands, a veteran LDP power broker who would avoid Abe's mistakes--above all his economic mismanagement and fixation on symbolic issues like increasing patriotism in the schools--while shepherding the party to the next general election, which could come at any time between now and the fall of 2009. Fukuda was also meant as an antidote to the wildly popular Junichiro Koizumi, who had sold his reform agenda and transformed Japanese politics by appealing directly to voters over the heads of traditional party power brokers and vested interests. After the end of Koizumi's term and Abe's flameout, Fukuda's appeal was based precisely on his conspicuous lack of charisma. Party elders thought that the Japanese electorate would welcome a cold pragmatist conducting business as usual after all the Sturm und Drang. Of course, it didn't hurt that that the bosses also thought Fukuda would be easier to control.

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Politics & Law: Yasuo Fukuda: Japan to Resume ODA Aids for Vietnam Soon.
News wire article from: Vietnam News Briefs December 16, 2008 700+ words
...16, 2008 Former Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda has told President Nguyen Minh...Vietnamese state media said Tuesday. Yasuo Fukuda is on a visit to Vietnam to attend...and multilateral cooperation, Yasuo Fukuda said. Yasuo Fukuda is pleased...
Japanese PM Yasuo Fukuda resigns.
News wire article from: Europe Intelligence Wire September 1, 2008 700+ words
...s beleaguered prime minister, Yasuo Fukuda, resigned today less than a year...economic problems, a grim-faced Fukuda said he had decided several days...creating a "political vacuum". Fukuda's resignation leaves the door open...
JAPANESE PM YASUO FUKUDA DELIVERS POLICY SPEECH TO THE DIET.
News wire article from: AsiaPulse News October 2, 2007 700+ words
...below.) MEDIA RELEASE PR27737 Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda Delivered Policy Speech to the Diet TOKYO, Oct. 1 /KYODO JBN-AsiaNet/ -- Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda delivered a general policy speech in a plenary session...
Yasuo Fukuda: A steadier hand for Japana*os helm?(WORLD)
Newspaper article from: The Christian Science Monitor September 24, 2007 700+ words
...Democratic Party (LDP) elected Yasuo Fukuda as the party's president Sunday...succession to Japan's top post. Mr. Fukuda is seen as more dovish and less assertive...outlook helped boost perceptions of Fukuda as a more conciliatory choice, especially...
Rising from the pack; Japan's new prime minister; Yasuo Fukuda faces a battle...
Magazine article from: Global Agenda September 25, 2007 700+ words
...fight MORE a duty than a pleasure, Yasuo Fukuda, a grey eminence of the Liberal...still has a big majority. So Mr Fukuda's elevation to Japan's leader...for his party's presidency. Mr Fukuda handsomely beat his only rival...
Japan's unpopular prime minister resigns.(WORLD)(Yasuo Fukuda)
Newspaper article from: The Christian Science Monitor Coleman, Joseph September 2, 2008 700+ words
...economy into political confusion. Yasuo Fukuda, in a hastily arranged evening news...importance of the economy," Mr. Fukuda said in the nationally televised...someone other than me to lead." Fukuda, whose father also served as prime...
The Last In The Line?(World Affairs)(Yasuo Fukuda)
Magazine article from: Newsweek International Roy, Rachel Kashiwagi, Akiko October 22, 2007 700+ words
...Christian Caryl And Akiko Kashiwagi Fukuda appears to be taking Japan backward...There won't be a honeymoon for Yasuo Fukuda. The new prime minister already...legislator Kotaro Tamura warns that if Fukuda's government fumbles on the policy...
China tops energy agenda for Tokyo's new leader.(Japan)(Yasuo Fukuda)
Newspaper article from: Weekly Petroleum Argus October 8, 2007 700+ words
...longstanding territorial differences. Yasuo Fukuda, the 71-year-old son of former prime minister Takeo Fukuda, was elected premier on 26 September...party and government financial scandals. Fukuda's reputation as a moderate is welcomed...
Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda Delivered Policy Speech to the Diet.
Press release article from: PR Newswire January 19, 2008 700+ words
...PRNewswire/ -- Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda delivered a policy speech in a plenary...January 18, 2008. Prime Minister Fukuda stated in his speech, "There are...opposition parties." Prime Minister Fukuda concluded his speech to say, "I...
Bank of Japan struggle tests prime minister's leadership.(WORLD)(Yasuo Fukuda)
Newspaper article from: The Christian Science Monitor Kambayashi, Takehiko March 20, 2008 700+ words
...chief has damaged Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda's leadership at a time of economic...lending agency, Wednesday. Mr. Fukuda's first pick, Toshiro Muto, the...subprime loan problem. Critics blame Fukuda for picking a candidate whom DPJ...
For more facts and information, see all results

Source: HighBeam Research, The Prime Minister Vanishes.(World Affairs)(Yasuo Fukuda)

©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA