*Survey period: July 13th and 14th ANN opinion poll: 57% think Prime Minister Kishida “should not run”: TV Asahi News [2024/07/15 05:54] ANN opinion poll revealed that 57% of people said that Prime Minister Kishida “should not run” for the September LDP presidential election. ANN conducted the opinion poll on the 13th and 14th. Regarding Prime Minister Kishida’s candidacy for the presidential election, the number of people who said “it would be better if he did” exceeded the number of people who said “it would be better if he did.” 43% of people said they “expect a change of government” after the next House of Representatives election, which is higher than the number of people who “expect the LDP-Komeito government to continue,” as in the previous month, but the gap is narrowing. 20.2% of people said they “support” the Kishida Cabinet. In response to the situation where poster board space was essentially sold during the Tokyo gubernatorial election, the Public Offices Election Act “needs to be reviewed” (omitted) *Full text at source.
The Constitutional Democratic Party always has the Japanese Communist Party by its side. NHK opinion polls also show that approval ratings for the LDP are up, approval ratings for the Kishida administration are down, and approval ratings for the Constitutional Democratic Party have been halved. I guess this means they want a change of government within the LDP; voters are paying close attention.
>Prime Minister Kishida: “It would be better if he didn’t run for office” This item wasn’t in last month’s opinion poll, was it? They’re misleading the survey results lol
Some idiot patriots are pushing Takaichi Sanae too hard, but I don’t think she’s as good at diplomacy as Kishida. I think she’d be better suited to working on strategic legislation in her current position.
But who should it be? Honestly, I think it would be better to give the LDP a good scolding. I’m not sure about the Constitutional Democratic Party either.
I’m asking about a replacement for Kishida. I’m looking for someone who can nurture companies like the semiconductor industry and earn foreign currency, not someone who will just throw around tax money.
[Prime Minister Kishida in danger of losing the election] The “Prime Minister’s prestige” is not effective in his hometown, and on the eve of the “kingdom collapsing,” voters are hoping for the emergence of a “candidate who can defeat Prime Minister Kishida.”
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