
Support Ratings for LDP: Can the Party Regain Public's Trust?
Whether the LDP can regain the public's trust and continue to manage the government will be tested in the upcoming House of Councillors election.
A nationwide survey by The Yomiuri Shimbun in June showed that the approval rating for Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's Cabinet stood at 32%, almost unchanged from 31% in the May survey. The Cabinet barely avoided a figure sinking into the 20s, which is considered 'dangerous waters,' likely because it has brought down soaring rice prices, albeit only slightly.
On the other hand, the support rating for the LDP fell by two percentage points from the May survey to 23%. This is a record low for the party since its return to power in December 2012, matching the low hit in the March 2024 survey.
In March 2024, many senior members of the former Abe faction and others were speaking at the Diet's Deliberative Council on Political Ethics. They were denying their involvement in the scandal surrounding political fundraising parties for factions, which involved violations of the Political Funds Control Law.
Though the LDP is not currently facing any scandals, the party may have lost support due to a buildup of distrust toward its political stance and policies. Since its return to power, the party has seen its strongest support in April 2013, during the second Cabinet of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, and in November 2020, for the Cabinet of Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga. The support ratings rose to 48% in both instances.
The figures indicating the decline in the LDP's momentum are not limited to the party support ratings.
In the latest survey, only 24% of respondents chose the LDP as the party they would vote for in the proportional representation segment of the upper house election. This was the lowest figure compared to the figures in the previous surveys before upper house elections in 2013, 2016, 2019 and 2022.
This year's May and June surveys also showed that more people were against the ruling bloc — the LDP and Komeito — maintaining a majority in the upper house than people in favor. That is two surveys in a row.
Although the questions have been asked in a different way, this is the first time since Prime Minister Taro Aso's Cabinet, just before LDP ceded control to the Democratic Party of Japan in 2009, that respondents have hoped for an opposition victory ahead of a major national election.
The ruling parties have found themselves in such a difficult position because they continue to manage the political situation haphazardly. Supporters likely view the parties as irresponsible for accepting the arguments of the opposition with little attempt to examine them, even though this was done for the minority ruling parties to pass the budget proposal and bills.
This spring, the Ishiba Cabinet tried to provide cash handouts as a response to high prices. However, since this was not well received by the public, the Cabinet abandoned the idea. Nevertheless, the cash handouts have been brought up again just before the upper house election. It must be said that the Cabinet's policies lack consistency.
Amid the increasingly tense international situation, Ishiba did not attend a summit of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization last month. His absence must have made LDP supporters doubt whether he can be trusted to steer Japan's diplomacy.
(From The Yomiuri Shimbun, July 1, 2025)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Mainichi
6 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Japan updates plan to cut estimated Nankai quake deaths by 80%
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- The Japanese government said Tuesday it has updated its disaster risk plan in the hope of reducing the estimated death toll from a potential megaquake occurring in the Nankai Trough by around 80 percent from the current estimate of up to 298,000. The original quake disaster preparedness plan, produced in 2014, also aimed to reduce by 80 percent the number of projected deaths from a massive quake around the trough, which stretches from western to central Japan. But the government has said actions taken since then would only reduce the toll by about 20 percent. The updated plan by the Central Disaster Management Council emphasized measures to be taken over the next 10 years to accelerate quake preparedness in designated regions such as embankment installments and investment by the central and local governments to strengthen infrastructure resilience. "It is necessary for the nation, municipalities, companies and non-profits to come together and take measures in order to save as many lives as possible," Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said at a disaster management council meeting. The government added 16 municipalities across six prefectures to the designated disaster prevention area, which now encompasses 723 municipalities. The goal of halving the number of buildings potentially destroyed by the quake or by subsequent fires from the current estimate of 235,000 remains unchanged. The government, which previously reviewed progress at irregular intervals, will also seek expert opinions and hold annual inspections to check whether targeted prevention measures are being implemented. The government also aims to have all municipalities regularly conduct evacuation drills by fiscal 2030 in areas likely to experience major tsunamis. The plan also proposes tsunami countermeasures be put in place at petrochemical complexes and urges individuals and the private sector to take precautions such as securing furniture. "A Nankai Trough earthquake feels more imminent compared to when the previous plan was formed, and may even occur while measures are being implemented," said Norio Maki, professor at the Disaster Prevention Research Institute at Kyoto University. "The government must ramp up support for municipalities," he added. "While measures for tsunamis such as setting up evacuation towers and embankments have progressed considerably, evacuation awareness may have declined among residents, and there is a need to raise it again." The government's deadliest scenario involves a magnitude 9-class earthquake occurring on a winter night, with the central Japan prefecture of Shizuoka projected to see the highest death toll of over 100,000.


Kyodo News
7 hours ago
- Kyodo News
Japan updates plan to cut estimated Nankai quake deaths by 80%
TOKYO - The Japanese government said Tuesday it has updated its disaster risk plan in the hope of reducing the estimated death toll from a potential megaquake occurring in the Nankai Trough by around 80 percent from the current estimate of up to 298,000. The original quake disaster preparedness plan, produced in 2014, also aimed to reduce by 80 percent the number of projected deaths from a massive quake around the trough, which stretches from western to central Japan. But the government has said actions taken since then would only reduce the toll by about 20 percent. The updated plan by the Central Disaster Management Council emphasized measures to be taken over the next 10 years to accelerate quake preparedness in designated regions such as embankment installments and investment by the central and local governments to strengthen infrastructure resilience. "It is necessary for the nation, municipalities, companies and non-profits to come together and take measures in order to save as many lives as possible," Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said at a disaster management council meeting. The government added 16 municipalities across six prefectures to the designated disaster prevention area, which now encompasses 723 municipalities. The goal of halving the number of buildings potentially destroyed by the quake or by subsequent fires from the current estimate of 235,000 remains unchanged. The government, which previously reviewed progress at irregular intervals, will also seek expert opinions and hold annual inspections to check whether targeted prevention measures are being implemented. The government also aims to have all municipalities regularly conduct evacuation drills by fiscal 2030 in areas likely to experience major tsunamis. The plan also proposes tsunami countermeasures be put in place at petrochemical complexes and urges individuals and the private sector to take precautions such as securing furniture. "A Nankai Trough earthquake feels more imminent compared to when the previous plan was formed, and may even occur while measures are being implemented," said Norio Maki, professor at the Disaster Prevention Research Institute at Kyoto University. "The government must ramp up support for municipalities," he added. "While measures for tsunamis such as setting up evacuation towers and embankments have progressed considerably, evacuation awareness may have declined among residents, and there is a need to raise it again." The government's deadliest scenario involves a magnitude 9-class earthquake occurring on a winter night, with the central Japan prefecture of Shizuoka projected to see the highest death toll of over 100,000.

8 hours ago
Japan Ruling, Opposition Parties Split over Inflation Relief
News from Japan Jul 1, 2025 21:15 (JST) Tokyo, July 1 (Jiji Press)--Leaders of Japan's ruling coalition called for cash handouts to cushion the impact of higher prices on households while those of opposition parties sought a consumption tax cut during a televised debate on Tuesday. The debate took place ahead of the July 20 election for the House of Councillors, the upper chamber of parliament. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, who leads the governing Liberal Democratic Party, touted the ruling bloc's proposal to provide 20,000 yen to 40,000 yen in benefits per person, saying this will serve as a "quick and intensive" relief measure. The cash handout program will not tap into the financial resources set aside for social security measures, Ishiba said, warning against opposition calls for a consumption tax cut. Tetsuo Saito, leader of Komeito, the LDP's coalition partner, said that revenues from the consumption tax finance social security measures and the levy "should not be used for temporary inflation relief." [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.] Jiji Press