Jun-chan still riding high in the polls
AdvertisementPrime Minister Junichiro Koizumi is still doing well in the polls, according to the Yomiuri Shimbun’s survey. Whether or not any of this popularity rubs off on Bush when they meet in Kyoto tonight, and whether or not the two of them will address the US bases in Okinawa (around 72% oppose the relocation issue according to another recent poll) remains to be seen.
On the 12th and 13th of this month, the Yomiuri carried out a survey across the whole country (of how many people is not noted), and found that support for the cabinet was running at 61.0%, 1.6% percentage points up from the last survey on the 15th and 16th of last month. Those who did not support the cabinet was at 30.4%, down 2.0% points from last time.
As for the priority issues he should address, top was pensions and other social security system reforms at 63%, the third time in a row that this was top. Next was economic measures, at 59%, tax system reforms at 31%, child-rearing support and other birth rate decline counter-measures at 29%, and employment measures also at 29%.
One of the structural reforms that Koizumi’s cabinet wants to perform, public employee system reform, was chosen by only 18% of the respondents as a priority issue, 10th of the 17 options presented to the interviewees.
Support for the governing LDP was measured at 41.6%, just 0.4% down from last time, whilst the opposition DPJ was down 1.5% to 11.9%, and those holding no party allegiances was up 2.1% at 38.7%.