The secret funding scandal ferments, and the approval rate of the Kishida cabinet is approaching the

Mondo International Updated on 2024-01-29

The secret funding scandal fermented, and the approval rate of the Kishida cabinet approached the "** waters".

Zhang Jing. According to a new poll in Japan, the approval rating of Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's cabinet fell to 225%, approaching the "** waters" below 20%. In response to the recent secret political funding scandal of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, more than nine out of ten respondents believe that the LDP has not responded effectively.

Japan's Fuji News Network conducted a survey of 1,035 Japanese adults from the 9th to the 10th, asking them to evaluate the performance of the Kishida cabinet. According to the results of a poll released on the 11th, the approval rating of the Kishida cabinet fell to 225%, compared to the previous month's similar survey**53 percentage points;The disapproval rate rose to 719%, an increase of 31 percentage point.

In Japan, a cabinet approval rating of less than 30% is considered to be entering "dangerous waters";If it falls further below 20%, it is considered to be stuck in the "** waters".

The poll revealed a scandal surrounding the Liberal Democratic Party's largest faction, the "** faction", which had secret political funds distributed to some members of the faction in the form of kickbacks, 93Two percent of respondents said the LDP and its factions had "big problems" or "some problems" in the way they responded87.7% of respondents believe that Fumio Kishida, as president of the Liberal Democratic Party, is "largely responsible" or "responsible" for the scandal.

When asked "how long do you want Fumio Kishida to be prime minister", 405% of respondents expressed a desire for him to "resign as soon as possible", 463% want him to "serve until the end of his term as LDP president next September." Regarding Kishida**'s economic policies, about 75% of respondents said they "don't expect it."

The poll also showed that the top three candidates for the question of who would be the most suitable to be the next prime minister were former LDP secretary-general Shigeru Ishiba, former environment minister Shinjiro Koizumi, and current digital minister Taro Kono. Fumio Kishida came in at No. 7.

A number of **** in Japan reported on the 10th, citing sources, that Fumio Kishida plans to reshuffle the cabinet and adjust the senior personnel of the Liberal Democratic Party in the near future, and remove the "**faction" ** Fumio Kishida told **reporters on the 11th that in order to regain the trust of the people, "appropriate measures will be taken at the right time". (End) (Special article by Xinhua News Agency).

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