Japan lawmakers vote down no-confidence motion against cabinet
TOKYO — Japan's lower house of parliament voted down on Tuesday (June 15) a no-confidence motion brought against the cabinet of Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga by opposition parties angered over its refusal to extend the current parliamentary session.
TOKYO — Japan's lower house of parliament voted down on Tuesday (June 15) a no-confidence motion brought against the cabinet of Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga by opposition parties angered over its refusal to extend the current parliamentary session.
The parties had sought a three-month extension of the session beyond its scheduled end on Wednesday, to tackle the Covid-19 pandemic as Japan rushes to ramp up vaccinations ahead of the Tokyo Olympics opening on July 23.
"They are refusing our calls to extend parliament in the face of one of the worst crises for decades," Mr Yukio Edano, leader of the main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, told the lower house before the vote.
Though Japan has not suffered the ravages of other nations over the coronavirus, its slowness in vaccinating citizens and patchy response have dented support for Mr Suga.
A survey by NHK public television showed 37 per cent of respondents approved of Mr Suga's government while 45 per cent disapproved.
That was the highest disapproval rating since the prime minister took office last September, but the majority held by his Liberal Democratic Party and other coalition partners meant the no-confidence motion had always been unlikely to pass. REUTERS