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Japan FM quits over illegal donation

Updated: 2011-03-06 18:55

(Agencies)

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TOKYO - Japanese Foreign Minister Seiji Maehara resigned on Sunday to take responsibility for accepting donations from a foreign national, adding to unpopular Prime Minister Naoto Kan's troubles as he battles to keep his own job.

Maehara, a security hawk who favours close ties with the United States, had been seen as a key contender to succeed Kan if the prime minister bows to pressure to step down himself.

Japan FM quits over illegal donation

Japan's Foreign Minister Seiji Maehara bows as he leaves at a news conference after a meeting with Prime Minister Naoto Kan at the Foreign Ministry in Tokyo March 6, 2011. [Photo/Agencies] 

Maehara's resignation deepens the impression of a government in disarray as Kan fights to keep his own Democratic Party (DPJ) from splintering and avoid calling a snap election while trying to enact budget bills in a deeply divided parliament.

The stalemate is blocking the passage of bills needed to implement a $1 trillion budget for the fiscal year from April, and Maehara said he had feared his scandal would only worsen the deadlock if he clung to his post.

"The budget deliberation in the upper house for fiscal 2011/12, an urgent issue, is at a crucial stage," Maehara told a news conference after meeting Kan. "I cannot let parliamentary deliberations get delayed through my political funding problem."

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The political impasse is also keeping Kan from getting opposition help on fiscal reforms, including a rise in the 5 percent sales tax, that he argues are vital to fund the costs of a fast-ageing society and curb public debt now twice the size of the $5 trillion economy.

Kan, whose voter ratings have slid to around 20 percent, himself faces calls from within his own fractious party to resign, while opposition parties are pushing him to call a snap election that the Democrats could well lose.

His health minister, Ritsuo Hosokawa, is also under fire for the government's messy handling of efforts to help housewives who mistakenly failed to pay their pension premiums.

Although Maehara's resignation is bad news for Kan, it may not necessarily hasten his exit. "It's impossible for him to call a snap election. Momentum will build for Kan to resign," said Nihon University political science professor Tomoaki Iwai.

Iwai added, however, that Kan was unlikely to quit without assurances from opposition parties that they would help enact the stalled budget bills, something they might well be unwilling to provide, especially ahead of nationwide local elections in April.

 

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