Friday, August 28, 2020
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe set to resign for health reasons
Wazzup Pilipinas!
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Japan's longest continuously serving prime minister, after taking office in 2012, is set to resign for health reasons.
Two hospital visits in one week sparked questions about whether Mr Abe's health was deteriorating.
He had been due to serve until September 2021. He has not revealed what the visits were for but one is reported to have lasted nearly eight hours.
He has suffered from the disease ulcerative colitis for many years but his condition is thought to have worsened recently.
In 2007 he resigned abruptly from an earlier term as prime minister because of his struggles with ulcerative colitis, a chronic condition affecting the large intestine, that he has lived with since he was a teenager.
Officials from his governing Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) have previously dismissed speculation that he would step down, saying the prime minister's health is fine.
On Tuesday one of his aides told Reuters that he thought Mr Abe would fulfil his tenure.
Akira Amari, head of the LDP's tax panel, dismissed the suggestion that the prime minister would dissolve parliament's lower house for a snap general election soon.
"There won't be a snap election for the time being," he said.
Still, rumours have persisted about Mr Abe's growing fatigue as he fields growing scrutiny for his handling of the coronavirus pandemic, at a time when approval ratings for his cabinet have dropped.
Under Japanese law, an acting prime minister would step in temporarily if Mr Abe were unable to perform his role, with no limits on how long they can stay in post.
Deputy Prime Minister Taro Aso, who is also finance minister, is first in line, followed by Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga.
An acting prime minister cannot call a snap election but they lead on other matters such as treaties and budgets until a new party leader and premier is chosen.
A resignation or an announced intention to resign would trigger a vote within Mr Abe's LDP to replace him as president.
This election would be followed by a parliamentary vote to elect a new prime minister.
The winner would hold the post until the end of Mr Abe's term in September 2021.
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