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JUNE
26, 2000 VOL. 155 NO. 25
Campaign
Controversies
Why
mori's gaffes may help at the polls
By TIM LARIMER Tokyo
P
L U S
Same Old, Same Old: The usual
suspects line up for votes
Expats: Japanese-Peruvians
interned in the U.S.
The small
seaside city of komatsu on japan's western coast is just an hour's flight
from Tokyo. But the contrast between this sleepy town and the bustling,
neon-lit capital helps explain how Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori's brand
of nationalistic conservatism can raise hackles in one part of Japan and
a shrug of the shoulders in another.
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ALSO IN TIME
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Mori
grew up in this area of Ishikawa prefecture, which Japanese journalists
have dubbed the "kingdom of conservatives." The streets near Mori's tile-roofed
house in Komatsu are home to Buddhist temples, a tatami-mat maker, a ceramics
shop and the residence of a flower-arranging master. Like many others
in the ranks of the Liberal Democratic Party, Mori rode his family coattails
to power. His grandfather and father were mayors of the small town of
Neagari. To this day, the Prime Minister's father Shigeki, who was mayor
for 36 years, is something of a mythological figure; many people support
Mori because of fond feelings for his father. Some still tell stories
of Shigeki plunging into the cold, stormy waters of the Japan Sea to retrieve
the bodies of two fishermen whose boat was shipwrecked. The Prime Minister
"was the son of our mayor," says 72-year-old Shinichi Mori (no relation).
"That's one reason why we supported him."
So it's no surprise that many here are comfortable with Mori's recent
invocation of Imperial Japan. "He is just using country language," says
Shinichi Mori. "His speech will become more polished in time." The Prime
Minister's rhetoric plays just fine in rural Japan. Countryside voters,
who tend to be more conservative than city folk, have given the ldp a
nearly uninterrupted hold on power for more than four decades. And the
party has used that power to make sure legislative districts are drawn
to give disproportionate weight to rural areas, where the Liberal Democrats
are stronger. In the last election, in 1996, the ldp won 56% of the seats
with just 39% of the vote. Some rural districts have fewer than 200,000
voters; some urban districts have more than 400,000.
That's why Mori's recent verbal gaffes may not have been accidental--and
are unlikely to cause him lasting damage. In May, he told an organization
of pro-Shinto members of parliament that Japan is a "divine nation with
the Emperor at its center." That remark outraged many Japanese, as well
as other Asians, who have long memories of the atrocities committed in
the name of the Emperor before and during World War II. In a subsequent
appearance Mori referred to Japan using the archaic term kokutai, a word
referring to national unity that was used in the years leading up to World
War II. He evoked war-era language again on a campaign stop in his home
town, Komatsu, calling on voters to protect the home front while he fights
on the frontline.
Like Tokyo's incendiary governor Shintaro Ishihara, Mori may be calculating
that an appeal to such right-wing, nationalistic sentiments will help
him hold onto power in this week's parliamentary election. Declining poll
ratings and a restless public suggest that a high voter turnout could
topple Mori. "It is my impression that Mori is trying to draw support
by making retrospective and sentimental remarks that point to Japan's
ancient regime," says Shingo Fukushima, 78, professor emeritus at Senshu
University in Tokyo.
Or it could simply be that this is what Mori believes. In the 1970s, he
belonged to Seirankai, a hawkish group of legislators that stood for a
stronger Japan independent of U.S. influence. The group included Ishihara.
Whatever Mori's true beliefs, the media lynching he has received over
his remarks only helps him in places like Komatsu. On his first visit
to the area after his series of controversial remarks began, 15,000 fans
came out to cheer him with cries of Banzai! "Because the press attacks
him, we're much more eager to support him now," says Kantaro Nishi. After
all, he's one of them.
With reporting by Sachiko Sakamaki/Komatsu
Write to TIME at mail@web.timeasia.com
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