0001Kei-chan at night★.Oct. 24, 2024 (Thu) 11:10:06.73ID:IXyPHvvS9
10/24 (Thu) 11:02 JIPPING Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba (President of the Liberal Democratic Party) said on the 24th that the party headquarters had paid 20 million yen to a party branch of a House of Representatives election candidate who had been de-endorsed by the party due to a faction slush fund scandal, “We paid it to the party branch, not to the unofficial candidate. I am outraged by the reports,” he said. sauce.
>>1 [Jewish parties] LDP, Constitutional Democratic Party (Noda faction), Japan Restoration Party, Komeito, Democratic Party for the People, Sabaku Tokai, Japan Conservative Party, Mintuku, all independents [Anti-Semitic parties] Constitutional Democratic Party (except Noda faction), Reiwa Shinsengumi, Social Democratic Party, Communist Party.
・Understanding and empathizing ・Following the rules Is there anyone among the independents who can be convinced by this explanation from the leader of a party that has pledged to do so?
>>1 [Constituencies where non-official fraudulent slush fund politicians are running] Fukushima 3rd district Oguma Shinji, Constitutional Democratic Party Karahashi Norio, Communist Party Uesugi Kentaro, Independent (20 million) Saitama 6th district Hosoya Mieko, Ishin Party Nakane Kazuyuki, Independent (20 million) Oshima Atsushi, CDP Akiyama Moe, Communist Party Saitama 13th district Sawaguchi Chieko, Communist Party Takai Takashi, Reiwa Party Nakahara Yuto, Ishin Party Hashimoto Mikihiko, Citizens Party Hashimoto Tsutomu, various factions Mitsubayashi Hiromi, Independent (20 million) Tokyo 17th district Iguchi Sachiko, Ishin Party Arai Sugio, Communist Party Yen Yori Ko Citizens Party Hirasawa Katsuei, Independent (20 0 million) Tokyo 21st district Yamashita Yoko, Ishin Mori Yuichi, councillor Odawara Kiyoshi, independent (20 million) Okawahara Masako, CDP Tokyo 24th district Yokura Sayuri, councillor Arita Yoshio, Constitutional Democratic Party Hatajiri Fumio, independent Urakawa Yusuke, Citizens Party Sato Yumi, Ishin Hagiuda Koichi, independent (20 million) Niigata 2nd district Kikuta Makiko, CDP Hosoda Kenichi, independent (20 million) Inoue Motoyuki, Ishin Fukui 2nd district Koyanagi Shigeomi, Communist Party Yamamoto Taku, independent (Takaichio) Saiki Takeshi, Ishin Tsuji Hideyuki, CDP Takagi Takeshi, independent (20 million).
When another politician in your party was being criticized, you were the one who said, “We need to explain things carefully until the voters understand,” right?
But that party branch supports the slush fund, doesn’t it? They use the money to support the slush fund, so it’s only natural that they’d be criticized, right? Well, it’s a shame that Ishihara is also so tied down by those ties.
In that case, wouldn’t it be better to nominate an official candidate to be consistent? What does it mean to expand the party’s influence when there is no official candidate in the branch?
>>20 There’s proportional representation regardless of the situation in the single-seat constituencies, right? That’s the activity fund. And politicians who have secret funds don’t lose their party seats just because they’re not officially endorsed.
[Good news] Unofficial LDP candidate: “I did receive 20 million yen 😤 but I won’t spend a penny during the election period! It’s all good!” [359965264]
>>33 It’s the prefectural branch of the Liberal Democratic Party. Usually, the branch chief is a member of the Diet from that district. They campaign not only for national elections but also for local elections. The candidate who was not officially endorsed this time, although he is not officially endorsed, he continues to serve as the branch chief of the prefectural branch. At this point, the prefectural branch received funds from the LDP headquarters, which are definitely election funds given to the non-official candidate. In other words, the LDP pretended to demand, “He used slush funds, so he is not officially endorsed, he will win on his own and be forgiven by the people of his constituency,” and gave the non-official candidate the same support as the officially endorsed candidate.
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