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Cablegate: Abe Buoyed by Wins in October 22 by-Elections

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SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
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E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV JA
SUBJECT: ABE BUOYED BY WINS IN OCTOBER 22 BY-ELECTIONS

REF: OSAKA 00576

1. (U) Summary. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is the big winner
in October 22 by-elections in Osaka and Kanagawa, after LDP
candidates swept both races by comfortable margins. The
press is attributing the LDP win to Abe's personal popularity
in the aftermath of his strong response to the DPRK nuclear
test and summits with China and Korea, and predicts a strong
boost to his domestic and foreign policy agenda. End
summary.

2. (U) Candidates from the ruling Liberal Democratic Party
(LDP) won Lower House by-elections in Kanagawa Prefecture and
Osaka on October 22, in the first electoral tests for Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe since he assumed office on September 26.
In Kanagawa Prefecture's district 16, Zentaro Kamei garnered
109,864 votes, easily defeating opposition Democratic Party
of Japan (DPJ) candidate Yuichi Goto, with 80,450. In
Osaka's district 9, the LDP's Kenji Harada defeated the DPJ's
Nobumori Otani 111,226 to 94,424. Both seats had been vacant
since early summer 2006, following the deaths of the LDP
incumbents. The Osaka seat had historically been held by the
DPJ, but fell to the LDP in last September's Koizumi
landslide. The ability to retain the seat was a big plus for
Abe.

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3. (SBU) According to Consulate General Osaka-Kobe contacts,
the LDP succeeded by reinventing itself as a younger,
reform-oriented party attractive to urban voters. The
majority of voters in their 20s supported the LDP, as shown
by NHK exit polls. The DPJ leadership visiting Osaka was
unable to dispel the perception that the party had run out of
dynamism and effective policies to deal with current domestic
and international challenges facing Japan. ConGen media
contacts reported that the DPJ was also hurt by scandals in
Osaka involving organized labor, so unions were largely
unable to mobilize support behind the DPJ. At the same time,
voters identified the DPJ with organized labor.

4. (U) There were bright spots for the DPJ, however. In
both races, the DPJ appears to have done well among
unaffiliated, or "floating" voters. In Kanagawa, the DPJ's
Goto pulled in 58.6 percent of the unaffiliated votes,
compared to only 37.3 percent for the LDP's Kamei. In Osaka
the spread was even wider, with the DPJ's Otani getting 60.7
percent to Harada's 28 percent. The DPJ was not expected to
have a chance in Kanagawa, but had hoped to regain the seat
it had historically held in Osaka. The DPJ appears to have
been hurt by the overall low voter turnout, down more than 17
percent in Kanagawa and more than 15 percent in Osaka.

5. (SBU) Embassy Tokyo contacts and the press are portraying
the election as a victory for Prime Minister Abe. The
elections were viewed widely as a referendum on the new
administration, and the double win is expected to provide a
boost to Abe's domestic and foreign policy agenda. News
reports following the elections noted the greater likelihood
that Abe would now be able to gain passage of several key
pieces of pending legislation, including the Basic Education
Law and the bill to elevate the Japan Defense Agency to a
Ministry, before the extraordinary Diet session ends on
December 15. The victories should also provide additional
momentum to Abe in tackling a number of foreign policy
initiatives, including DPRK sanctions.

6. (SBU) On paper, Kanagawa 16 and Osaka 9 were two
relatively minor by-elections in districts that were already
controlled by the LDP. Kanagawa, the home turf of former
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, has always been an LDP
stronghold; the party holds 16 out of 18 electoral districts
in the prefecture. As the son of the deceased incumbent, the
35-year-old Kamei also benefited from strong name
recognition. Osaka, while traditionally DPJ territory, is
also a stronghold of ruling coalition junior partner Komeito,
which can be counted on to provide the organized vote from
the Soka Gakkai religious group, which has many members in
the Osaka area.

7. (SBU) Retaining the two seats in the Lower House was
almost irrelevant statistically to the ruling coalition,
which already held 458 seats to the DPJ's 195. Still, both
parties pulled out all the stops, with personal appearances
by top leaders, including Abe and Koizumi, door-to-door
campaigning, and attempts to enlist the support of local
organizations. The two campaigns seemed to be less about the
issues, and more about personal popularity and strategies to
get out the vote. In both contests, Komeito showed once
again why it is so important to the LDP as a coalition
partner, despite the small number of seats its members hold
in the Diet. While neither LDP candidate succeeded in
breaking the 90 percent support mark among LDP voters, both
were able to take more than 95 percent of the Komeito vote.
The DPJ leadership, meanwhile, blamed the losses on Abe's
high popularity rates in the aftermath of the DPRK nuclear
test.

8. (SBU) Comment: The LDP victories in the October 22
by-elections are the latest in a long string of
accomplishments for Abe, including his deft handling of the
DPRK nuclear test, the summits with China and Korea, and the
visit by Secretary Rice. The DPJ, coming off leader Ichiro
Ozawa's illness and his lackluster performance in direct
debates against Abe in the Diet on October 18, has yet to
find a chink in Abe's armor. The two parties will face off
again in gubernatorial campaigns in Fukushima on November 12
and Okinawa on November 19, followed by unified local and
Upper House Diet elections in April and July of 2007.
SCHIEFFER

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