Published: 17:52, August 27, 2020 | Updated: 18:55, June 5, 2023
Japan's Abe to serve out term as LDP leader, top aide says
By Bloomberg

In this July 21, 2019 file photo, Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister and president of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), reacts after placing a red paper rose on an LDP candidate's name to indicate an election victory at the party's headquarters in Tokyo, Japan. (PHOTO / BLOOMBERG)

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe should be able to serve out the remainder of his term as party leader ending about a year from now, his right-hand man said, after recent hospital visits raised questions about the premier’s health.

Abe’s current term as leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party ends in September of next year

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga, 71, said in an interview with Bloomberg on Thursday that he expects Abe to explain his health condition in a proper way. Abe is scheduled on Friday at 5 pm to give his first full news conference since June, at which time he’s expected to discuss virus policy as well as his own health.

“Of course,” Suga said, when asked whether Abe could withstand another year in a physically demanding job that sometimes requires weeks in a row in parliamentary committees. “He’ll be all right,” he said, adding that he saw no change in his condition.

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The yen weakened as much as 0.2 percent to 106.20 against the dollar before paring losses after Suga’s comments were reported. Analysts said the currency could strengthen if Abe were to step down given his so-called Abenomics has helped keep the yen in check since 2013.

Abe’s current term as leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party ends in September of next year. The party has run the country for most of the last 65 years, and the LDP leader is almost assured of serving as prime minister. Surveys show it having a commanding lead over a fractured opposition.

Suga has worked closely with Abe since he swept to office a second time in 2012, helping him win six straight national elections. Abe’s health concerns have raised questions about succession in the LDP, with Suga’s name being listed among possible contenders.

The lack of open dissent in the LDP has been one of the reasons Abe has endured to become Japan’s longest-serving prime minister. Some potential candidates may be holding fire while he’s in office, but a large degree of continuity is likely in managing the world’s third-largest economy.

Suga has emphasized the importance of reviving the economy even amid a second wave of virus cases, after Japan suffered its worst economic downturn on record in the April-June quarter. A state of emergency over the infection that was lifted in late May, effectively closed many businesses for weeks during that period.

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Suga has pushed policies including subsidies for travel and eating out, even as critics said they risked worsening the infection’s spread. Japan has seen by far the lowest death toll among Group of Seven advanced countries.