Support for Japan government rises on response to Ukraine invasion—survey | Inquirer News

Support for Japan government rises on response to Ukraine invasion—survey

/ 01:03 PM March 28, 2022

Support for Japan government rises on response to Ukraine invasion—survey

Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida speaks during a news conference at the prime minister’s official residence on February 25, 2022, Tokyo, Japan. Rodrigo Reyes Marin/Pool via REUTERS

TOKYO — Support for Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s government rose overall for the first time in three months, with crucial elections just months away, as nearly 70% of respondents said they approved of his response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Some 67% of respondents to a weekend survey conducted by the Nikkei daily and TV Tokyo said they approved of the government’s response to the Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine, which Russia calls a “special military operation”. Only 22% disapproved in the survey, conducted on a monthly basis.

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Overall, support for Kishida, who took office in October, stood at 61%, a rise of 6 points from a month ago.

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Japan has slapped sanctions on a broad range of Russian individuals and organisations, as well as saying it will revoke Russia’s most-favoured nation trade status – a contrast to its lukewarm response to Russia’s seizure of the Crimea in 2014 under former prime minister Shinzo Abe.

The strong support is also good news for Kishida, a former foreign minister, ahead of a crucial election for the upper house of parliament in July. A strong win for his ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) would allow him several election-free, politically stable years in which to pursue his policy goals.

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The government also won plaudits for its handling of the coronavirus pandemic amid a recent fall in new cases. Some 64% said they approved, a rise of 8 points from a February survey – and the highest since the question was introduced in the survey in February 2020.

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The government of Kishida’s predecessor, Yoshihide Suga, was plagued by public perceptions that it had bungled Japan’s response to the pandemic sank.

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