Arsenal told Tierney is ‘more rounded’ than £50m Wan-Bissaka

Neil Lennon has warned Celtic will not be pushovers in any Kieran Tierney transfer after rejecting a second bid from Arsenal.

Celtic are thought to have set a £25million price tag for the left-back with Arsenal’s latest bid reported to have fallen short in terms of the structure of the add-ons.

The Scottish champions have seen Moussa Dembele linked with a huge summer move less than 12 months after selling him for £19million and earlier sold Virgil Van Dijk for an initial £13million before seeing Southampton move him on to Liverpool for five times that price.

So they will stand firm in their valuation of the Scotland international.

Lennon said: “I don’t know what Arsenal’s financial state is, I know what ours is and we are quite comfortable with the situation at the moment.

“There has been a second bid, the bid has been rejected, and it’s as you were.

“Whether they come in again or not, I can’t answer that.

“He’s a great player and a great talent and at 22 he has already achieved a hell of a lot in his career and has so much more to give to the game.

“It doesn’t surprise me there are potential suitors out there for a player of his quality but he’s our player, he’s on a long-term contract and – while it’s a back-handed compliment for all the work people have done here over the years with Kieran – we don’t want him to go.”

Lennon was asked if Arsenal‘s bid was disrespectful given Manchester United recently paid Crystal Palace £50million for full-back Aaron Wan-Bissaka.

“Disrespectful is strong but I do feel our valuation of Kieran is correct,” Lennon said. “We can’t do anything about what clubs do in England. Fifty million for Wan-Bissaka is a lot of money.

“We feel Kieran is a far more experienced and more rounded full-back at this juncture of his career. So he’s an asset for us and we rate the player very, very highly.

“We are not going to be pushed over in any negotiations, we are in a strong position in a lot of our assets in the team.

“I mean, some of the players who have left here in the last few years have gone on to do alright in the Premier League, so we think we know what we are doing in terms of developing players.

“Do we believe they can play in the English Premier league? Of course, but we don’t want them to play in the Premier League. We want them to play here and in the Champions League for us.”

Tierney is still not in contention to play following a double hernia and pelvic problems.

But Lennon said: “He is out on the grass, he is a couple of weeks away from joining in with the rest of the team. It’s a slow-burner but we are pleased with the progress he is making.”

 

Party leaders sound off ahead of Upper House vote

Ahead of the Upper House election on Sunday, party leaders and executives were asked the main issues they want to raise with voters, including the economy, the pension system and constitutional revision.

LDP

Despite growing concerns triggered about the pension system by a recent government report, Liberal Democratic Party Secretary-General Toshihiro Nikai emphasized that it is sustainable and said the report, released on June 3 by the Financial Services Agency, caused a public misunderstanding.

“The public pension system is sustainable well into the future thanks to a series of reforms,” Nikai said. “I have no worries.”

The FSA report said an elderly couple would need ¥20 million in life savings plus public pension benefits to survive after retirement.

“It’s a shame to cause misunderstanding and anxiety,” Nikai said.

Referring to the LDP’s election campaign, Nikai underlined that it is important for the LDP to present its plans for dealing with Japan’s low birthrate and rapidly graying population.

“It is also necessary that the Cabinet of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe continue to firmly and stably address important challenges, such as making a strong economy, revitalizing local communities and establishing a disaster-resistant country at a time when the world is grappling with increased tensions,” he said.

The Abe administration has won high marks for its stable management of the government and solid achievements, Nikai added.

“I think this is a situation where we can ask the public with confidence to let the Cabinet continue to take charge in the Reiwa Era,” he said, referring to the new imperial era kicked off by the emperor’s abdication in April.

Nikai said the minimum number of seats targeted by the ruling camp, which comprises the LDP and Komeito, is 63, or a majority of the seats being contested. “It will not be difficult if we try hard,” he said.

He also downplayed the impact of the major opposition parties unifying their candidates in all single-seat prefectural districts. No matter how much they team up, they cannot compete with the LDP’s traditional solidarity, Nikai said.

Nikai, however, brushed off concerns about how the scheduled hike in the consumption tax to 10 percent from 8 percent in October will affect the LDP’s prospects in the election. The oft-delayed tax hike is part of reforms designed to bring stability, he said, adding that measures to mitigate its impact are already in place.

Nikai said both the ruling and opposition camps should meet halfway to promote discussions on constitutional revision.

“The Diet has a responsibility to present options that the people can choose from,” he said.

One of Abe’s lifelong goals has been to rewrite Article 9 of the Constitution to legitimize the existence of the Self-Defense Forces, Japan’s de facto military.

Scholars have disputed the legality of the SDF because Article 9 renounces Japan’s right to wage war or use force to settle international disputes. It also says Japan shall never maintain land, sea and air forces or other war potential.

“We need to take time to reach agreement, but time should not be spent in vain,” Nikai said of the Diet’s stalled debate on the issue.

Komeito

The Upper House election is an opportunity for voters to choose between stable government and confusion, Komeito leader Natsuo Yamaguchi said.

“As a ruling party, we hope to tackle key challenges at home and abroad after securing political stability,” Yamaguchi said.

The LDP and Komeito, the ruling coalition’s junior party, have a two-thirds majority in the Lower House and a majority of about 60 percent in the Upper House.

On the consumption tax hike, Yamaguchi recalled the 2012 law enacted by the then-ruling Democratic Party of Japan, the LDP and New Komeito to double the 5 percent levy to 10 percent in two stages. He called the opposition now being raised by former members of the now-defunct DPJ, including those who are now executives in the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, a “great betrayal of the public.”

“The consumption tax is fundamentally significant as a stable source of government revenue for improving social security services,” Yamaguchi said.

He said Komeito will address the tax hike in its campaign by sincerely explaining steps the ruling coalition has taken to ease its impact, including special shopping vouchers.

He also proposed that all Diet members accept a 10 percent cut to their annual salaries to show they are willing to help bear the burden.

Regarding public alarm bells raised about the public pension system by the FSA’s June report on postretirement savings, Yamaguchi described the system as “stable.”

On Article 9, however, he cast a skeptical eye toward Abe’s pitch to make constitutional revision a key issue in the election, saying it is “unlikely to appeal to voters.”

Komeito’s policy is to add new provisions to the charter, if necessary, without changing its basic principles.

“There are various ideas about including new values in the Constitution, but none of them is ripe enough for a proposal to the people,” Yamaguchi said.

CDP

The Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan will focus on improving people’s daily lives as a key pillar of its platform, President Yukio Edano said.

“The largest interest of voters and the most important issue is bringing back a sense of safety to people’s lives,” Edano said. “We will campaign on the three major platforms of creating an economy that places importance on family finances, a society that takes pride in diversity, and a democracy in which people can feel they are participating.”

Sunday will be the main opposition party’s first foray into the triennial election. The party was formed in 2017 by defectors from the short-lived and now-defunct Democratic Party. Edano said his CDP will seek to uphold democratic norms and constitutionalism in its election campaign.

He also lamented what he said was the Abe administration’s tainting of the government bureaucracy, saying the supposedly nonpolitical institution has been marred by political influence scandals since Abe took office.

“(The administration) is continuously destroying the foundations of democracy, which is epitomized by the preservation of official records and the public disclosure of information,” Edano said, bringing up the multiple scandals related to the disappearance or manipulation of public documents under the Abe administration.

“A series of scandals has come up as a result of (bureaucrats) having to pander to politicians,” he said.

In this regard, he also raised the issue of sontaku, the practice by which bureaucrats tacitly carry out what they assume to be the wishes of politicians, spawning acts of favoritism and other alleged government misconduct.

To counter these alleged violations, the CDP is pitching “Reiwa Democracy” for the election. The slogan is a play on Taisho Democracy, a wave of democratic movements that took place in the Taisho Era (1912-1926).

“Democracy in Japan was given a major upgrade by Taisho Democracy,” Edano said. “We must do something that matches its scale.”

On the Constitution, Edano said his party is moving forward with discussions on revisions “from the standpoint of strengthening constitutionalism,” specifically focusing on restricting the right of the prime minister to dissolve the House of Representatives for a snap election, and bolstering citizens’ rights when it comes to information disclosure.

The Constitution is one of the major issues in the election because Abe is bent on legitimizing the existence of the SDF by rewriting war-renouncing Article 9.

“We will strongly fight against allowing the exercise of collective self-defense and changing Article 9 for the worse,” Edano said, referring to the act of coming to the aid of an ally under armed attack, even if Japan itself is not under attack.

Although a U.N. right, collective defense is deemed by many as contrary to Article 9 as Japan’s actions under it could be perceived as use of force.

The opposition leader also repeated his party’s call to again suspend the second stage of the consumption tax hike.

“It takes an immense amount of time to rebuild an economic structure in which consumption rises in a sustainable way,” he said, wary that another tax hike will again chill consumer spending.

The CDP will join hands with other parties in the election to avoid splitting the vote for the opposition. Many in fact have already agreed to back a single unified candidate in single-seat constituencies.

“We have fulfilled the prerequisites for maximizing the number of seats the opposition can win,” Edano said. “Now it is up to each party to utilize its strengths and work as hard as possible.”

Nippon Ishin no Kai

Ichiro Matsui, leader of Nippon Ishin no Kai, has called for earnest discussions on proposals for constitutional amendments to be held in the Diet after the election.

While noting it feels “a little bit strange” to see this become a key issue in the election, Matsui said he hopes the constitutional revision panels in both chambers of the Diet will hold active debates on the matter after the poll. As a top election issue, politicians owe it to the voters to hold serious debates on the matter, he said.

“If the ruling LDP earnestly aims to revise the Constitution, it should change the Diet’s existing obsolete rule” that the Constitution panels must be convened with the consent from both the ruling and opposition parties, he said.

“Opposition parties that refuse to appear for discussions on constitutional revisions or avoid such debates are giving up on their duties,” Matsui said.

On recent remarks by U.S. President Donald Trump that the Japan-U.S. security treaty is placing a heavy burden on the U.S. and is therefore unfair, Matsui said it would be irresponsible to pretend not to know the view of the president of an allied country.

Discussions should thus be held on the possibility of revising Article 9 in light of the reality, he added.

Matsui also called for discussions on establishing a national facility where anybody can pay tribute to the war dead, noting it is very difficult for Japanese and overseas leaders to visit Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo because those it honors include Class A war criminals from World War II.

The Shinto facility is regarded by countries such as China and South Korea as a symbol of Japan’s past militarism.

Matsui said Nippon Ishin also sees a need to create an intelligence agency as Japan’s information-gathering capacity is lower compared with other advanced countries.

Among the party’s key policy promises, Matsui said Nippon Ishin aims to freeze the planned hike in the consumption tax.

The tax hike will “dampen consumption and throw cold water on the economy,” he said.

The Abe administration plans to use revenue from the tax hike to fund a program to make nursery and kindergarten services and tertiary education free of charge.

Noting that the Osaka Prefectural Government is working to scrap tuition for private high schools, Matsui, who is also the mayor of Osaka and head of regional party Osaka Ishin no Kai, emphasized it it is possible for the central government to eke out the financial resources it needs without raising taxes.

He also said that Abenomics, the prime minister’s reflationary policy mix, had helped Japan overcome deflation “to a certain extent” but that its deregulatory efforts “remain insufficient,” though the economy is recovering moderately.

Matsui denied the possibility of Nippon Ishin forming a coalition government with the LDP.

“The LDP is a party that protects vested interests,” he said. “While having no intention at all to reform the Diet, the party plans to carry out a tax increase. Nippon Ishin has no plan to ally with the LDP.”

DPP

The Democratic Party for the People is making its “household first” economic policy the center of its election campaign, leader Yuichiro Tamaki said.

“Stubbornly slow consumption indicates the weakest point of Abenomics, as well as its limitations,” Tamaki said.

“We’re advocating a ‘family finances first’ economic policy to enrich household purses and achieve sustainable economic growth,” he said.

Tamaki repeated his party’s opposition to the consumption tax hike and insisted that a tax cut should be considered without reservation if the need emerges.

In the meantime, he argued that the Abe administration is trying to cover up the truth behind Japan’s public pension system because it has not yet released the five-year report on the system’s finances this year.

On the issue of constitutional reform, Tamaki criticized Abe for deviating from substantive talks, saying the prime minister is only highlighting the refusal of some opposition parties to hold discussions.

Tamaki noted that during the previous Diet session, the DPP was the only opposition party to submit a bill to revise the national referendum law to ban political TV commercials throughout the entire campaign period of any referendum on the Constitution.

This is to ensure that a public decision on amending the charter won’t be determined by the parties with the deepest pockets.

Before July 4, when campaigning officially kicked off for the Upper House election, the DPP had 23 seats in the chamber, with eight up for grabs.

“We aim to win more than eight seats,” Tamaki said.

Tamaki stressed that opposition parties, including the DPP, must coordinate their campaigning after fielding unified candidates in the 32 single-seat electoral districts across Japan.

To drum up support for his party, Tamaki underscored the need to make steady, low-key efforts, calling on all DPP Diet and assembly members to “work at full throttle.”

Earlier this year, the DPP absorbed the Liberal Party, which was led by former kingmaker Ichiro Ozawa.

“We’re leaving behind-the-scenes coordination with our support groups to him now,” Tamaki said. “His joining our party reinforced our attitude toward elections.”

Tamaki predicted the next election for the House of Representatives, the Diet’s more powerful lower chamber, will be held this year.

“We aim to field at least 100 candidates in the single-seat districts,” he said.

JCP

Japanese Communist Party leader Kazuo Shii has emphasized that the JCP and other opposition parties should unite to win seats to create a divided Diet as a step toward toppling the Abe administration.

“The Abe administration is now at a dead end both in domestic politics and on the diplomatic front,” Shii said.

“In the triennial election, I want to call on people to cooperate to oust the Abe administration and change the nation’s politics to make Japan a country where each and every person can have hopes and live in peace,” he said.

Shii added: “We’re determined to turn the LDP, its Komeito ally and groups supporting the ruling pair into a minority, create a divided Diet and let opposition parties take the initiative of politics to force Abe to dissolve the House of Representatives for a snap general election.”

“We aim to form an opposition-led government” by capturing a majority also in the Lower House through a possible general election, he said. “We want to leverage the Upper House election for that goal.”

On the debate over constitutional amendment, Shii said the JCP is actively discussing the matter and that no political party is avoiding the debate.

“Whether or not to support Abe’s proposal to amend pacifist Article 9 of the top law will be a key issue,” he said.

The JCP aims to win 8.5 million votes under the proportional representation system.

“It’s a high goal, but I think it’s not impossible to achieve if we try hard,” he said.

A total of 124 seats — 74 in prefectural single-seat districts and 50 from proportional representation — will be up for grabs in the Upper House election.

The JCP has 14 but only eight will be contested — three single seats and five proportional representation seats.

Its goal is to gain seven or more seats via proportional representation, Shii said.

“We’re resolved to maintain the three district seats at any cost and are trying to increase the number dramatically,” Shii said.

When asked about the number of seats the party is targeting in single-seat districts, he said “all of our candidates aim to win.”

“Cooperation among opposition parties is progressing compared with the time when the previous Upper House election was held three years ago,” Shii said. “We do hope to attain the target.”

Shii repeated his party’s opposition to the planned tax hike.

He said: “We oppose the consumption tax itself. Raising the tax rate during the current economic doldrums is an absolutely foolish measure.”

SDP

The Social Democratic Party aims to prevent the parties that support constitutional revision from securing a two-thirds majority in the Upper House election, Secretary-General Hajime Yoshikawa said.

The ruling LDP is highly likely to speed up preparations for an attempt at amending the Constitution should the pro-amenment camp get there, Yoshikawa said.

“The biggest challenge for now is to block the LDP, its coalition partner Komeito, and Nippon Ishin no Kai from winning a combined two-thirds majority,” he said.

Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to propose a revision to the Constitution.

Though Abe is eager to rewrite Article 9, “very few” people want such a revision, he said.

“If a third provision is added to the article, it would make its second provision, which prohibits Japan from possessing any war potential, a dead letter,” Yoshikawa said. “We can’t let that happen.”

“Under current diplomatic policy, just following the United States, such a constitutional revision could lead to SDF participation in activities involving the use of force overseas if something happens in the Middle East,” he said.

In the election, the party hopes to win a combined three seats via single-seat districts and proportional representation, he said.

The top priority is to win 2 percent of all votes to maintain its status as a political party, he added, stressing that, for the SDP, the poll is a fight for survival.

This will also be an election to create a foothold for ousting the Abe administration, which has brought crisis to the people, regional communities and the Constitution, he said.

On the consumption tax increase, Yoshikawa said that when the rate was raised to the current 8 percent from 5 percent in April 2014, consumer spending slumped even though the economy was recovering.

Since the economy is even worse than it was in 2014, it is clear that the tax hike will make it even weaker, he said.

LDP support rate edges up ahead of Japan’s Upper House election, poll finds

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party has extended its lead over opposition parties, according to a Kyodo News poll, as the campaign for the July 21 Upper House election heats up.

The latest nationwide survey, conducted for two days from Friday, shows support for the LDP has edged up 2.2 percentage points to 31.0 percent from the previous poll conducted on June 26 and 27.

The survey also found that 7.2 percent said they would vote for the main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, down 1.8 points.

Some 5.6 percent said they support Komeito, the LDP’s coalition partner, unchanged from the June poll, followed by Ishin no To (Japan Innovation Party) at 4.4. percent, up 1.2 points, the Japanese Communist Party at 2.9 percent, down 0.5 points, and the Democratic Party for the People at 2.5 percent, up 0.9 points. Some 37.4 percent said they were undecided, down 1.8 points. The 17-day election campaign started on July 4.

A total of 2,359 people were contacted, with 1,229 answering questions.

One half of the House of Councilors’ seats are contested every three years. Due to electoral system reform, the total number of its seats will increase to 245 from the current 242 with the upcoming election, in which 124 seats — 121 plus an additional three — are up for grabs.

Voters will cast two ballots — one for a single-seat district and the other for a proportional representation block.

For the single-seat districts, 32.2 percent said they would vote for the ruling coalition of the LDP and Komeito, up 0.9 point, while 21.8 percent favored the opposition, up 1.5 points.

The approval rate for the Abe Cabinet fell 1.1 points to 46.5 percent, while the disapproval rate also decreased 3.8 points to 40.3 percent.

As a controversial government panel report that raised concerns about the country’s public pension system remains a key issue during the campaign, the survey showed 46.1 percent see the report as a point of contention, down 4.0 points.

The report said that an average retired couple would face a shortfall of ¥20 million under the current pension system if they live to be 95 years old. Finance Minister Taro Aso, who doubles as minister for financial services, said the report contradicts the government’s view.

While Abe is calling for more discussions on the revision of the Constitution during his campaign, 51.4 percent voiced opposition to an amendment, up from 50.1 percent in the previous poll.

On the government’s plan to hike the consumption tax to 10 percent in October from the current 8 percent, 54.3 percent expressed opposition, up 3.2 points.

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Chelsea compare Mount to RLC as he signs new deal

England Under-21 international Mason Mount has signed a five-year contract with Chelsea.

The 20-year-old midfielder spent last season playing under new Blues boss Frank Lampard during a loan spell at Derby.

“It’s a massively proud moment for myself and my family,” Mount told the club’s website.

Mount has yet to make his debut for Chelsea’s first team but impressed for Championship side Derby during the last campaign, scoring 11 goals in 44 appearances in all competitions.

He played against the Blues in a Carabao Cup tie in October.

Mount added: “I joined this club at six years old and it was always my goal to play for the first team one day.

“I’m really looking forward to the coming season now and working hard to have an impact here at Chelsea.

“I’ve been at the club for a long time already and hopefully I’ll stay for a long time to come.”

Mount had a loan spell at Vitesse Arnhem in 2017-18, scoring nine goals in 29 Eredivisie appearances and five more in three play-off games as the Dutch club qualified for the Europa League.

Chelsea director Marina Granovskaia said: “Mason has come right the way through the Chelsea academy and has always stood out as a fantastic talent and dedicated individual.

“We have monitored his development extremely closely while he has been out on loan and believe he is now ready to be a member of our squad competing at the top of the Premier League.

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“Like another of our academy graduates, Ruben Loftus-Cheek, we are delighted Mason has committed himself to the club this summer and look forward to an exciting future ahead.”

Solskjaer says Man Utd ‘need a player’ like former skipper

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer insists Manchester United can “get back to the level we were” – but the Red Devils are still lacking leadership.

The United boss was speaking at an even in Perth where they are currently preparing for the Norwegian’s first full season in charge.

Solskjaer promised a ‘ruthless’ cull of the dressing room during a hugely disappointing conclusion to last season but United have so far struggled to shift some players while the club has so far resisted the temptation to sell Paul Pogba.

United have only brought in Daniel James and Aaron Wan-Bissaka – two players with vast potential but many fans are struggling to see where the immediate improvement required will come from.

Solskjaer is still optimistic of signing more players and the former United striker admits he needs more leadership of the type provided by Bryan Robson during his 13-year spell at the club.

Standing next to Robson while addressing supporters, Solskjaer said: “We need to win again. We are on the way to building a new squad.

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“We’ve got new staff in, coaching staff. I believe so much in this club and this project. To be manager of this club is fantastic.

“I’m standing next to the history of this club. I never had the honour of playing with Robbo but we need a player like him in the team.

“We’re waiting for the young ones to come through because we’ve got so many exciting players and I’m sure we’ll see the best of them in the years to come. There are some experienced ones as well that still have a few years left in them.

“We can get back to the level we were, definitely.”

Nuno hopes Costa-linked Wolves ‘make a bunch’ of signings

Nuno Espirito Santo is keen to add to his Wolves squad before the new Premier League season begins.

Wolves finished an impressive seventh in their first season back in the top flight last term but Nuno feels more quality is needed to sustain those levels.

Raul Jimenez and Leander Dendoncker have made their loan moves permanent this summer but Molineux is yet to welcome any new faces. Get Diego Costa in.

“It is obvious that we need to bring in (players) but there are a lot of things in consideration,” said manager Nuno at a press conference in China ahead of the Premier League Trophy.

“We are only going to bring in players that add quality to the squad we have. That is why it requires time.

“Sometimes things are not possible but I am hopeful we are going to bring in players.

“We have only sold players until now. We have lots to consider. I hope we make a bunch of very good [signings].

“We are getting close to the window closing, it is hard, especially for us who are trying to add quality not quantity. The market is out of normal, prices are going up and up but we need to be strong and bring in the players we have identified.”

 

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Liverpool set mammoth price for Rodgers signing yet to debut

Liverpool have set an eye-watering price tag of £15million for striker Taiwo Awoniyi.

Despite joining under Brendan Rodgers in August 2015 for £400,000, Awoniyi is yet to even make his debut for Liverpool.

Work-permit issues have restricted the 21-year-old’s opportunities at Anfield, leading to five separate loan spells away.

His last such spell came at Belgian side Royal Excel Mouscron, where he scored 11 goals and assisted three in 16 Jupiler Pro League games.

That form has attracted interest from CSKA Moscow, but Liverpool insist they will not sell for anything less than £15m.

The Liverpool Echo say the Reds are ‘open to another loan move’ for the forward, with Schalke, Mainz and a number of French and Belgian clubs interested.

Awoniyi, who has four years left on a contract he signed last summer, admitted that his work-permit woes could dash any chance he has of playing for Liverpool.

“It saddens my heart that it’s been difficult to get a work permit for the past four years,” he told BBC Sport in April.

“At the end of the season we have to go back to Liverpool to discuss.

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“Everyone knows the importance of the work permit and how it works, and that you’d need to play for your national team.

“If you don’t get a chance with your national team then it becomes difficult to get it.

“Personally, I chose Liverpool because I would love to play in the English Premier League for Liverpool.

“If God says it will happen then it will, but if not then I can only go on with my life and career.”

 

LDP support rate edges up ahead of Japan’s Upper House election, poll finds

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party has extended its lead over opposition parties, according to a Kyodo News poll, as the campaign for the July 21 Upper House election heats up.

The latest nationwide survey, conducted for two days from Friday, shows support for the LDP has edged up 2.2 percentage points to 31.0 percent from the previous poll conducted on June 26 and 27.

The survey also found that 7.2 percent said they would vote for the main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, down 1.8 points.

Some 5.6 percent said they support Komeito, the LDP’s coalition partner, unchanged from the June poll, followed by Ishin no To (Japan Innovation Party) at 4.4. percent, up 1.2 points, the Japanese Communist Party at 2.9 percent, down 0.5 points, and the Democratic Party for the People at 2.5 percent, up 0.9 points. Some 37.4 percent said they were undecided, down 1.8 points. The 17-day election campaign started on July 4.

A total of 2,359 people were contacted, with 1,229 answering questions.

One half of the House of Councilors’ seats are contested every three years. Due to electoral system reform, the total number of its seats will increase to 245 from the current 242 with the upcoming election, in which 124 seats — 121 plus an additional three — are up for grabs.

Voters will cast two ballots — one for a single-seat district and the other for a proportional representation block.

For the single-seat districts, 32.2 percent said they would vote for the ruling coalition of the LDP and Komeito, up 0.9 point, while 21.8 percent favored the opposition, up 1.5 points.

The approval rate for the Abe Cabinet fell 1.1 points to 46.5 percent, while the disapproval rate also decreased 3.8 points to 40.3 percent.

As a controversial government panel report that raised concerns about the country’s public pension system remains a key issue during the campaign, the survey showed 46.1 percent see the report as a point of contention, down 4.0 points.

The report said that an average retired couple would face a shortfall of ¥20 million under the current pension system if they live to be 95 years old. Finance Minister Taro Aso, who doubles as minister for financial services, said the report contradicts the government’s view.

While Abe is calling for more discussions on the revision of the Constitution during his campaign, 51.4 percent voiced opposition to an amendment, up from 50.1 percent in the previous poll.

On the government’s plan to hike the consumption tax to 10 percent in October from the current 8 percent, 54.3 percent expressed opposition, up 3.2 points.

Japan weighs possible SDF dispatch to Strait of Hormuz as U.S. seeks coalition

Officials from major political parties on Sunday debated whether Self-Defense Forces troops should take part in a U.S.-proposed coalition to safeguard strategic waters near the Strait of Hormuz amid reports the government is mulling such a move.

Koichi Hagiuda, executive acting secretary-general of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, stressed the need to consider a response to the proposal but said the current situation does not require the immediate dispatch of SDF troops to the Middle East.

“We can’t behave as if we are not an interested party,” Hagiuda said during a TV appearance. “Cooperation with the international community is important. Some 80 percent of vessels transporting (oil) to Japan pass through the strait.”

Tetsuo Saito, secretary-general of Komeito, the junior coalition partner of the LDP, said Japan should consider how it can make contributions by looking at the law on the fight against piracy, under which Maritime SDF vessels and patrol aircraft have been sent to waters off Somalia.

By contrast, Tetsuro Fukuyama, secretary-general of the main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, called any dispatch “absolutely impossible under current law.”

Akira Koike, head of the secretariat of the Japanese Communist Party, and Hajime Yoshikawa, secretary-general of the Social Democratic Party, also said they were opposed the dispatch of SDF troops.

The debate comes as sources said the government is carefully examining the possibility of dispatching the SDF in response to the U.S. plans.

The administration of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is expected to take action on the matter after the July 21 Upper House election, the sources said.

The government is facing a tough decision as its move could provoke a strong public backlash, according to the sources.

“Japan will continue diplomatic efforts to ease tensions in the Middle East and stabilize the regional situation through cooperation with the United States and other countries concerned,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said at a news conference on Friday.

Suga stopped short of denying that Tokyo has been approached by Washington on the proposed military coalition. Japan has been engaging in various exchanges with the United States, he said, while declining to give details.

Under one feasible option, the government could dispatch the SDF for maritime security operations, a move which would fall within the law, the sources said.

The SDF is allowed to protect Japanese ships as well as vessels carrying goods bound for Japan and can conduct on-the-spot inspections of suspicious ships. But the scope of such operations is very limited and weapons can only be used for self-defense.

Still, the sources said, the SDF personnel may not be able to serve in the military coalition as envisaged by the United States.

Since 2009, Japan has been sending MSDF destroyers and P-3C patrol aircraft to the Gulf of Aden off Somalia, which the anti-piracy law permits.

Under the law, the SDF can protect non-Japanese ships, but it only allows for action to be taken against pirates, not threats from ships controlled by foreign governments.

The national security laws, which came into force in 2016, can also be used to provide a rationale for the sending of SDF troops to the Strait of Hormuz.

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If the government believes the situation in the strategic waterway could put the nation’s security at risk, the SDF can provide logistical support to the U.S. military and an international military coalition.

The SDF can also offer such support if Japan takes part in an international coalition to safeguard peace and security under a U.N. resolution.

But it would not be easy for the government to send SDF troops to the strait under either scenario because Diet approval is needed, sources said.

Under the current laws or a U.N. resolution, Japan would also be unable to carry out policing activities, the sources said.

Some people claim that Japan is theoretically allowed to send SDF troops by exercising the right to collective self-defense, which was enabled under the security legislation. But a prerequisite for exercising the right can be met only after armed conflict occurs between states.

Another option is to create special one-off legislation, but it would take time to enact such a law, the sources said.

Japan will not be able to dispatch SDF troops to the proposed coalition under its existing legal system, a veteran LDP lawmaker said. “A special law is the only option,” the lawmaker added.

As the Abe administration has claimed that the national security laws allow Japan to seamlessly respond to any situation, however, the government may face public criticism if it moves to craft special legislation, the sources said.

Pro-Constitution reform bloc might not be able to win two-thirds majority in election

The ruling coalition and other forces in support of constitutional amendments may fall short of a two-thirds majority, or 164 seats, in the new House of Councilors to be elected in the triennial poll next Sunday, a Jiji Press survey suggested Sunday.

Any amendment to the Constitution needs to be supported by at least two-thirds of lawmakers in both chambers of the Diet and by a majority backing in a national referendum.

The ruling Liberal Democratic Party and its coalition partner, Komeito, are likely to win well over a majority of the 124 Upper House seats up for grabs, according to the survey conducted by the major news agency through its network of branch offices across the nation.

The LDP is expected to gain around 40 of the 74 seats up for re-election in constituencies. The party’s candidates are leading rivals in 19 of the 32 single-seat constituencies.

The LDP is likely to secure at least one seat in all of 13 districts where two to six seats will be contested, and may be able to gain a second seat in Hokkaido, Chiba Prefecture and Tokyo.

In the proportional representation system, the LDP is expected to capture around 18 of the 50 contested seats, according to the survey.

The LDP on its own is on course to clear 53 seats, the victory-or-defeat line for the ruling coalition set by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who is also LDP president. The number will give the LDP-Komeito coalition a majority in the new 245-seat Upper House including uncontested seats.

Komeito is likely to win more than the 11 seats it held before the election. All seven candidates in constituencies may be elected, while the party may win another seven seats in the proportional representation bloc.

The LDP-Komeito ruling coalition is on course to win 70 seats, but it is uncertain whether it can win the 85 seats needed to reach the two-thirds majority along with Nippon Ishin and other forces in support of constitutional amendments, including uncontested seats.

Opposition parties have unified their candidates in all single-seat constituencies, setting up one-on-one competition with the ruling bloc. But the opposition camp is falling behind, except for some areas, such as the Tohoku region and Aichi and Okinawa prefectures.

The main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, which has nine seats up for re-election, is likely to win twice as many seats. It is performing steadily in multiple-seat constituencies, mainly in the Tokyo metropolitan area, and may win a second seat in Tokyo.

The CDP is likely to secure 10 seats in the proportional representation system.

The Democratic Party for the People is struggling both in constituencies and the proportional representation bloc, and is unlikely to maintain the eight contested seats, although it is expected to defend its seats in Nagano and Aichi prefectures.

The Japanese Communist Party is expected to maintain its eight seats up for up re-election. Nippon Ishin no Kai is likely to win eight seats, including a second seat in Osaka Prefecture, its home district.

In the proportional representation system, the Social Democratic Party is likely to defend its only seat. Political group Reiwa Shinsengumi may win a seat.

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