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Japan election campaign kicks off

As more than 380 candidates took to the streets across the nation, pleading for votes from vans outside train stations and shopping arcades.

Tokyo: Japan’s parliamentary election campaign kicked off on Wednesday as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s ruling party seeks a mandate for his economic policies amid opposition criticism that the lives of the ordinary people are not improving.

As more than 380 candidates took to the streets across the nation, pleading for votes from vans outside train stations and shopping arcades, Abe opened the campaign with a pledge to proceed with his “Abenomics” plan to revive the economy and pull the country out of a slump.

“The biggest topic of this election is economic policies,” Abe told a crowd in Kumamoto, a southern city struck by deadly earthquakes in April. “This is an election in which we decide whether to return to that dark doldrums or not.”
Up for grabs in the July 10 vote are 121 seats, or half of the seats in Parliament’s less powerful upper house.

The pro-business ruling party is hoping for a show of support for Abe’s economic program, while the opposition is criticising his efforts to have Japan take a bigger global security role and has warned of his party’s ultimate goal to rewrite Japan’s pacifist constitution to reflect the new security policy.

“We will stop the reckless Abe politics and change its course,” Katsuya Okada, head of the main opposition Democratic Party, said. “We will bring in a new wind into Japanese politics.”

( Source : AP )
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