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- <text id=89TT1217>
- <title>
- May 08, 1989: Japan:Sand In A Well-Oiled Machine
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- May 08, 1989 Fusion Or Illusion?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 44
- JAPAN
- Sand in a Well-Oiled Machine
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As kinken-seiji -- money politics -- claims Takeshita and his
- aide, the Japanese anxiously wonder, What next?
- </p>
- <p> Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita persevered for months, but
- last week his determination to weather the burgeoning Recruit
- scandal gave out. The meticulous planner and quintessential
- clubman of Japanese politics surprised his country by abruptly
- announcing that he would quit his post "to regain the trust of
- the people." Yet his departure had been a long time coming, as
- pressure built for months over what the Japanese call
- kinken-seiji, or money politics, the well-oiled system by which
- the nation's leaders attain power.
- </p>
- <p> The Prime Minister clung to his job until a weekend news
- story reported that Ihei Aoki, his right-hand man, had received
- a 50 million-yen ($347,222) loan from the Recruit Co. two years
- ago that apparently found its way into the Takeshita campaign
- chest. The disclosure flatly contradicted the version of events
- that Takeshita had laid out before the Japanese Diet in early
- April. Two days after the Aoki story broke, Takeshita came to
- the conclusion that he could not keep his job; public
- disapproval was so strong that his government's popularity
- rating had plummeted to a mortifying 3.6%. "I have decided to
- step down," Takeshita told his countrymen, "to take
- responsibility for the spread of political distrust."
- </p>
- <p> The Prime Minister's attempt to invest his disgrace with
- honor was overshadowed only a few hours later by the news --
- long anticipated by many Japanese -- that one of the key players
- had committed suicide. Aoki, 58, Takeshita's closest political
- aide for 30 years, slashed his wrist, neck and foot with a razor
- blade, then hanged himself with a necktie. As the man who had
- handled Takeshita's political finances, some newspaper
- commentators speculated, Aoki may have taken his life to shield
- the Prime Minister from possible criminal prosecution. But Aoki
- may simply have been following a long-standing Japanese
- tradition in which a servant accepts blame for his master's
- downfall by killing himself.
- </p>
- <p> The dramatic turns in the Recruit scandal, which grew over
- the past ten months into Japan's worst since World War II, left
- the nation's politics in chaos. Japanese were anxiously asking,
- What next? First the Liberal Democratic Party must find a new
- Prime Minister untainted by the scandal. Japan is likely to face
- months of weak leadership and political uncertainty. That could
- have consequences as far away as Washington, where a host of
- trade and defense disputes have yet to be resolved. One of the
- thorniest was on the way to being settled last week, however,
- when President Bush approved a controversial deal with Tokyo for
- production of the new FSX jet fighter once Japan promised to
- safeguard American jobs and technology. But Congress may still
- reject the agreement.
- </p>
- <p> The Japanese must also decide whether to turn an unsavory
- scandal into an opportunity to reform their money-greased
- political system. That may prove the biggest challenge.
- Takeshita fell victim to his success at mastering the sometimes
- seamy rules of the system. In common with other party leaders,
- Takeshita indirectly received shares of cut-rate stock in
- Recruit, an aggressive information and real estate conglomerate.
- In all, Takeshita received more than $1 million in campaign
- contributions, stocks and secret loans from the company. The
- money went not to a personal account but to fund campaigns and
- pay staff salaries.
- </p>
- <p> Not much of what Takeshita did was necessarily illegal. But
- the endless disclosures of wide-scale political financing
- bordering on corruption eventually shocked a nation that had
- come to think of itself as a modern, democratic superpower. "The
- L.D.P. must change," said Hiroko Yoshida, 27, a department-store
- clerk. "It can no longer stay as it is after this scandal."
- Takeshita, who was also in trouble for imposing a consumption
- tax, was blamed for exposing the dirty side of the nation's
- politics, then failing to correct it.
- </p>
- <p> The question is whether anyone else will -- or can. The
- system's defects are rooted in the fact that one party, facing
- an ineffective opposition, has held power for 34 straight years.
- But the Liberal Democrats boast a spectacular record for peace
- and prosperity during those years, and no one knows whether
- Japan's irate electorate will force the party into lasting
- reform.
- </p>
- <p> In the short term, the L.D.P. will be preoccupied with
- designating a new Prime Minister. Takeshita promised to resign
- when the Diet enacted a 1989 budget, now one month overdue. In
- a departing act of bravado, Takeshita defied the Diet's
- tradition of consensus to push the budget through the lower
- house without the participation of the opposition parties. They
- had refused to take part until former Prime Minister Yasuhiro
- Nakasone, in office when the most flagrant abuses occurred,
- testified about his role. The budget will probably become law
- in 30 days, and Takeshita will step down.
- </p>
- <p> Who will succeed him? The leading Mr. Clean is Masayoshi
- Ito, 75, an elder statesman of the L.D.P. with a reputation for
- integrity. Among the five bickering factions that make up the
- L.D.P., he is the consensus choice, at least as a caretaker.
- But Ito, who is in poor health, has expressed his reluctance to
- take over, saying a "younger man" ought to get the job. Party
- insiders contend that Ito fears he will not be given sufficient
- independence. Already, a back-room struggle is under way as
- Takeshita and his supporters maneuver to ensure that they will
- continue to pull the strings. To pick someone other than a
- senior politician like Ito would be nothing short of
- revolutionary.
- </p>
- <p> L.D.P. leaders are jittery about the prospect of losing
- their majority in the upper house after elections that must take
- place by mid-August. Retaining control of the lower house in
- elections to be held no later than the summer of 1990 is even
- more important, since that body appoints the Prime Minister. "By
- that time, we will have political reform," said an L.D.P.
- leader. "The public sentiment will not be as vehement as it is
- now." As usual, the L.D.P. seems more interested in keeping
- itself in power than cleaning up Japan's corruption-prone
- politics.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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