TOKYO, Oct. 21 -- Japanese voters are expected to decide the future landscape of Japan's politics in a House of Representatives election on Sunday in which Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is likely to win with low popularity.
The projected victory of Abe's ruling coalition, however, was largely due to the chaos entangling the opposition forces, leading to voters' lack of options while the prime minister himself's popularity remained questionable amid unresolved scandals, multiple polls showed.
Sunday's election pits Abe's conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and its ruling coalition partner, Komeito, against two newly formed parties, the "reform conservative" Party of Hope and the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (CDPJ).
Leaders of the parties made their last appeals to voters on the streets on Saturday, the last day before the election, with Abe stressing the nation's economic "achievements" and security concerns, while Yuriko Koike of the Party of Hope and CDPJ leader Yukio Edano calling for breaking Abe's dominance in politics.
Recent polls, however, showed that Abe's dominance might stick for a while, with the LDP and its coalition partner the Komeito party together projected to win some 310 seats, a two-thirds majority in the 465-seat lower house.
The Party of Hope and the CDPJ, meanwhile, were both projected to win around 50 seats, vying for the second largest party in the lower house, according to a recent Kyodo News poll.
【国际英语资讯:Spotlight: Japans general election to kick off with Abe projected to win amid low populari】相关文章:
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