Home Blog Page 5660

Marcos ill-gotten wealth case could lead to crisis

STOCK PHOTO

By John Victor D. Ordoñez, Reporter

AN UNFAVORABLE judgment against the heirs of the late dictator Ferdinand E. Marcos including his son and namesake could lead to a constitutional crisis, political analysts said at the weekend.

“A decision that is unfavorable to President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. could lead to a constitutional crisis because the agent that is supposed to execute the lawful order of the court, which is the Philippine National Police is actually under the direct control of the president being its commander in chief,” Marlon M. Villarin, who teaches political science at the University of Santo Tomas, said in a Viber message.

“This is a test of how credible our judicial branch is in maintaining its constitutional mandate of being independent and free from the influence of politics and public accountability to the Executive department,” he added.

The Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) filed the case in 1987, accusing business associates of the elder Mr. Marcos and his wife Imelda of acting as their dummies to acquire ill-gotten wealth using state funds.

His family was originally set to present initial evidence at a hearing set for July 7, but the Sandiganbayan, the country’s anti-graft court, reset the proceedings for a pre-trial hearing on Aug. 5.

Mr. Marcos’ lawyer also sought more time to review the records of the case.

Last month, the Sandiganbayan’s Second Division in a 13-page order allowed the Marcos family to present evidence after rejecting the government’s motion to waive the family’s right to present evidence.

After the dictator passed away in 1989, the court ordered his heirs — Imelda, President Marcos and his sisters Imee and Irene — to substitute for him in the case.

“It will always be a sour point in his presidency, and will likely cause more accusations of using the powers of the Office of the resident to influence other institutions to protect himself and his family’s interests in case the ruling or outcome will be in his favor,” Maria Ela L. Atienza, a political science professor at the University of the Philippines said in a Viber message.

Mr. Villarin noted that the outcome of the case could “test the resiliency” of the presidency as an institution.

Victor D. Rodriguez, Mr. Marcos’ executive secretary, did not immediately reply to a Viber message seeking comment.

The dictator and his family were forced into exile in Hawaii after a popular street uprising toppled his regime in 1986.

That same year, his successor, the late President Corazon C. Aquino created the PCGG to recover ill-gotten assets allegedly amassed by the Marcoses and his cronies during his two-decade reign, almost half of which was under martial rule.

In 2003, the Supreme Court (SC) awarded the Philippine government $658 million from the frozen Swiss bank deposits of the former president.

The High Court ruled that only about $304,000 of the Marcos family’s income was lawful since they did not file any statement of assets and liabilities required by law.

“While he said countless times that it is time to move on and start with current cases of corruption, he has no moral ascendancy to expect other officials to be clean,” Ms. Atienza said.

“There are already many legal and ethical issues against him and his family, which leads us not to expect genuine efforts to have an accountable and responsible government with him as president.”

Mr. Marcos started in office on June 30 after winning the May 9 presidential election by a landslide, completing a remarkable comeback for his family.

In a speech that echoed his unity campaign slogan, Mr. Marcos, 64, vowed to fulfill his promises to Filipinos without any excuses, including giving them better lives. He urged the people to work with his government, adding that “we will go very far under my watch.“

Tax bureau chief Lilia C. Guillermo earlier said she would enforce the collection of the unpaid estate tax of the late dictator as ordered by the courts.

The unpaid estate tax was worth P23 billion in 1997 and had ballooned to more than P200 billion due to interests and other fees, according to former Supreme Court Justice Antonio T. Carpio.

In December, the tax agency sent a written demand to the Marcos family to settle the tax.

Ms. Guillermo said she had not discussed the matter with Mr. Marcos, who tapped her to head of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR). The Marcoses have remained mum on the issue.

“I don’t know if that’s really P200 billion, and maybe if that’s really the amount, imagine it will really help collections of BIR,” Ms. Guillermo said.

Marcos feeling better after COVID infection

PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

PHILIPPINE President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr., who tested positive for the coronavirus last week, is doing well and continues to work in isolation, according to the presidential palace.

“[He is] giving out directives to his Cabinet officials in the comfort of his home,” Press Secretary Trixie Cruz-Angeles said in a statement on Sunday.

Mr. Marcos tested positive for the virus in an antigen test on Friday and had mild fever and dry cough.

An RT-PCR test was also done to confirm the result, Ms. Angeles said.

On Saturday, the President got a visit from his doctor, who noted that he has “greatly improved with only mild symptoms,” she said.  “[He has] no fever, no loss of taste and no smell sensation.”

The examination showed that the president’s throat was clear of any inflammation, Ms. Angeles said. “There was no sign of respiratory distress or pneumonia.” 

She said home medications for Mr. Marcos, 64, were being continued and he was under close monitoring by his doctor “until the completion of his home isolation period.”

On Thursday, Mr. Marcos’ Facebook page showed photos of his meeting at the presidential palace with members of the newly installed Private Sector Advisory Council, which was formed to consolidate public-private efforts to address the problems of the agriculture sector.

Mr. Marcos and a few of his guests took off their masks for some photographs.

He first tested positive for the coronavirus in 2020.

He held his first Cabinet meeting on July 5, which focused on the economy. He has yet to name his secretaries for the Health, Energy, Science and Technology and Human Settlements departments. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

CA rejects plea by Ampatuan for hospital transfer

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE COURT of Appeals (CA) has rejected the appeal of the principal convict in the massacre of more than 50 people in Maguindanao province in 2009 to be transferred to a hospital to avoid being infected with the coronavirus.

In a nine-page decision dated July 4, the appellate court affirmed a Quezon City trial court decision against former Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) Governor Zaldy U. Ampatuan as it ruled the petition had become moot due to decreasing infections and the availability of vaccines.

The appellate court cited government data that said 27,879 of 50,000 inmates at the national jail in Muntinlupa City had been fully vaccinated as of March 14.

Metro Manila is under Alert Level 1, the most relaxed quarantine status.

“An actual case may become moot and academic, however, when, by virtue of supervening events, the conflicting issue that may be resolved by the court ceases to exist,” Associate Justice Angelene Mary W. Quimp-Sale said in the ruling.

The court also said Mr. Ampatuan had failed to expound on the “clear and present danger” that he mentioned in his pleading.

Mr. Ampatuan and his brother, former Maguindanao Mayor Andal “Datu Unsay” U. Ampatuan, Jr. are serving life sentences after being convicted of 57 counts of murder for the massacre.

The massacre took place when journalists and family members of Esmael G. Mangudadatu, a political rival of the Ampatuan family, were accompanying him to the Commission on Elections to file his certificate of candidacy on Nov. 23, 2009.

Mr. Mangudadatu was running for governor of ARMM to end the 20-year rule of the Ampatuan family. The Committee to Protect Journalists, a global media watchdog, said the massacre was the “worst single incident of journalist killing.” — John Victor D. Ordoñez

PHL, US reaffirm commitment to strengthen supply chains, climate crisis response 

DFA.GOV.PH
DFA.GOV.PH

THE PHILIPPINES and the United States have reaffirmed their commitment to jointly reinforce supply chains and address the climate crisis, according to their foreign affairs leaders.  

Secretary Blinken and I agreed to continue working together on building resilient supply chains, addressing the climate crisis and transitioning to clean energy,Foreign Affairs Secretary Enrique A. Manalo said in a tweet on Sunday after speaking with US Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken at the weekend. 

Appreciate US commitment to alliance and to PH as equal and sovereign partner in promoting peace, prosperity & international law-based order in the region,he said.  

State Department spokesperson Ned Price in a statement on Saturday also said the conversation highlighted the increasing significance of the US-Philippine bilateral alliance to security and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific region and around the world.”  

US President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. earlier said he looked forward to working with Philippine President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. to continue strengthening the US-Philippine bilateral relations.  

Mr. Biden said he wants to expand cooperation on such issues as the fight against the coronavirus, climate crisis response, promoting broad-based economic growth, and respect for human rights.  

Mr. Marcos has assured the US leader that the Philippines has always held the United States in high regard as a friend, an ally, and a partner.Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

Galvez says Marcos gov’t committed to Bangsamoro transition as he stays on as peace adviser

SECRETARY Carlito G. Galvez, Jr. is keeping his post as presidential peace adviser on holdover capacity, according to a memo released by the Office of the President on Saturday.  

He will stay on until the end of the year or until a replacement has been designated, or if he is reappointed, according to the memo signed by Executive Secretary Victor D. Rodriguez.  

In order that there will be no disruption in the activities of the Office of the Presidential Peace Adviser on Peace, Reconciliation and Unity and the implementation of the comprehensive peace process,it said.   

Mr. Galvez, a retired military general, was appointed by former President Rodrigo R. Duterte in 2018 to head what was then the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process.   

He was one of the top commanders that led security forces against Islamic State-linked local terrorists in the 2017 Marawi siege. He retired in December 2018 as chief of the Armed Forces of the Philippines.   

In his message during Saturdays celebration of Eid al-Adha or the Muslim Feast of Sacrifice, Mr. Galvez said the new leadership is committed to pursuing peace programs, particularly in the Bangsamoro region in the countrys south.  

The Marcos administration is inspired by the lessons imparted by the Eid al-Adha, and is determined to continue the implementation of the comprehensive Philippine peace process, especially in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao,he said.   

He was also designated by Mr. Duterte as chief implementer of the inter-agency task force against coronavirus. MSJ 

SWS April poll: 46% of Filipinos optimistic economy will improve in a year

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

MORE than 40% of adult Filipinos expect the Philippine economy to recover in the next 12 months, according to a Social Weather Stations (SWS) poll conducted in April.

Citing its survey from April 19 to 27, SWS said 46% of adult Filipinos were optimistic that the country’s economy will improve, which is four points below the result in December 2021.

The local pollster said 28% believed that the Philippine economy will stay the same, while 6% said it will worsen.

The resulting Net Economic Optimism score is +40, a score classified by SWS as excellent.

SWS said the economic optimism score used to be “mediocre” -9 in July 2020 and mediocre -5 in September 2020. It  was a “high” +24 in November 2020, it added.

The survey, in which 1,440 adults were interviewed, was conducted before the Philippines held a presidential election on May 9.

Optimism was highest in Luzon excluding the capital region Metro Manila at +46, followed by Metro Manila at +43, Mindanao in the south at +43, and the Visayas in central Philippines at +18.

“The 4-point decline in the national Net Economic Optimism score from December 2021 to April 2022 is due to slight decreases in all areas except in the Visayas,” it said.

The SWS concluded that the results of the economic optimism survey was directly tied to its April 2022 personal optimism poll, which found that 44% of adult Filipinos believed their quality of life will improve.

“Net economic optimism is higher among personal optimists (+63) than among those who said ‘no change’ (+31) and among personal pessimists (-35).”

SWS said the economic optimism score was highest among adults who belong to families who consider themselves as not poor at +54, “compared to +39 among those who belong to families who consider themselves as borderline poor and +32 among those who belong to families who consider themselves as poor.” — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Metro Manila public transport system not ready for return to in-person classes — commuter network

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

A TRANSPORT advocacy network has warned that the current situation of public transportation in Metro Manila, the countrys capital region, is not yet ready for a shift to face-to-face classes.  

The government should be wary of the additional demand to our already heavily-burdened public transport system,The Passenger Forum (TPF) said in a statement at the weekend.   

Metro Manila or the National Capital Region, composed of 16 cities and one municipality within a 636-square kilometer area, has a population of almost 13.5 million as of 2020. 

This problem needs to be addressed for us to successfully phase back into normal classroom-based education.” 

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. last week announced that his government is targeting to fully implement in-person classes nationwide by November this year, citing his education chief.   

The group said the government should not ignore the connection between the transport crisis and the target to return to in-person classes. Physical fatigue will add to the mental exhaustion of our students and teachers.”  

Another group, the Move as One Coalition, which has been asking the next administration to promote and set aside enough funds for active transport, has said the public transport sector is now in a deadly spiraland collapsing.”  

Transport was the second biggest driver of overall inflation in May at a rate of 14.6%, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority.  

On the other hand, a group of 2,500 private schools on Sunday backed the administrations plan to fully implement in-person classes nationwide, noting that its members have been preparing for the plan for months.   

In general, we are ready to comply with the directive of the President to go back to full face-to-face classes until November,” the Coordinating Council for Private Educational Associations (COCOPEA) said in a statement.  

The group asked the government to expedite its vaccination efforts for members of the education sector. 

The government should also simplify and streamline procedures and requirements for the return to face-to-face classes to encourage more schools to participate in the plan, it added.  

If face-to-face classes are to be mandated in September, private schools [should] still be given the flexibility to offer hybrid or full online classes,it said. The final decision on whether the learner returns to face-to-face classes or attends hybrid or full online classes [should also depend] on the parents.”  

In May, the government said about 73% of public schools in the country were already qualified for face-to-face classes.  

More than 34,000 schools have been nominated for the face-to-face classes as of May 26. Of these, 33,000 are public schools, while 1,174 are private schools.  

The Philippine government had ordered the closure of schools soon after a coronavirus pandemic was declared in March 2020. The country was the last in the world to reopen schools for physical classes. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza 

VP Sara to relocate office to Mandaluyong 

VICE President Sara Z. Duterte-Carpio meets with Education officials at the department’s office in Pasig City on July 6, 2022. — INDAY SARA DUTERTE OFFICIAL FACEBOOK PAGE   

VICE President Sara Z. Duterte-Carpio will relocate her office to Mandaluyong City to enhance its efficiency, her spokesman said.  

This will enhance efficiency, economy, and result in streamlined processes since all the OVP employees are within the same area,Reynold Munsayac, Ms. Duterte-Carpios spokesman, said in a statement at the weekend. 

Mr. Munsayac said they decided to move out of the state-owned Quezon City Reception House in New Manila used by her predecessor, former Vice President Maria Leonor G. Robredo, after inspection and human resource inventory.  

He said the new office will be more accessible to the public due to its proximity to major roads and public transportation facilities.  

Ms. Duterte-Carpio also has an office at the Department of Education in Pasig City, which is near Mandaluyong. 

Ms. Duterte-Carpio, Mr. Marcos’ education chief, last month disclosed a plan to build a permanent residence for future vice presidents.  

In the Philippines, the president and vice-president are elected separately and may come from different political parties. Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza 

House bill modernizing immigration bureau to generate more funds refiled 

A BILL seeking to modernize the Bureau of Immigration (BI) for improved efficiency and revenue collection has been refiled at the House of Representatives.  

Theres no question that the BI can easily raise between P10 billion to P12 billion in annual revenues, possibly more,Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program Party-list Rep. Marcelino NonoyC. Libanan, who refiled House Bill 1069 or the proposed Bureau of Immigration Modernization Act, said in a statement on Sunday. 

Before the pandemic, the BI already managed to produce P9.3 billion in revenues in 2019, up 32% from the P7.03 billion it collected in 2018,he added.  

The measure failed to pass the Senate in the 18th Congress, which held several probes on reported illegal activities in the bureau, including bribery and human trafficking.   

The proposed law seeks to reorganize and further professionalize the BI, upgrade its systems, and increase staff pay.  

Under the bill, the BI will be required to retain no more than P1.2 billionof its annual income so that it can invest in automation projects, such as a fully online application and payment system that may help eliminate corruption.  

The bureau generates income from visa processing and extension fees; fines and penalties; clearance and certification taxes; and immigration tax.  

The bill also mandates the establishment of a new Immigration Academy for career advancement, and an Internal Affairs Service which will serve as a watchdog against illegal and unethical conduct by staff. Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

Access to Banaue road sections still limited after mudslide

MEMBERS of the police and Bureau of Fire Protection clear out mud on town center streets after a flash flood and mudslide in Banaue on July 7. — BFP

SEVERAL sections of roads to and from Banaue that were cut off by last weeks flash flood and mudslide have been partially reopened, according to the regional office of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH).   

The DPWH-Cordillera Administrative Region office said as of Saturday, total clearing operations are still ongoing while punch thruopenings have been made at the following affected road segments: Banaue-Hungduan-Benguet, Banaue-Mayoyao-Isabela, and Nueva Vizcaya-Ifugao-Mt. Province boundary road.   

However, the Poblacion part of the Banaue-Hungduan-Benguet highway that was closed on June 27 due to a road slip remains inaccessible.   

Banaue, home of what forms part of the Rice Terraces of the Philippine Cordilleras recognized as a UNESCO Heritage Site, was struck by a rampaging flash flood on July 7 that swept away vehicles and damaged structures in the town.   

We will look into the cause of the floods to prevent a repeat any time this rainy season, Mayor Joel B. Bungallon said in a statement on Friday. He has since declared a state of calamity in the municipality.   

Among the affected structures are the state-owned Banaue Hotel and Youth Hostel. 

Tourism Secretary Christina Garcia C. Frasco, in a statement at the weekend, said the 81-room facility is temporarily closed until the damage has been fully assessed and fixed.   

The Department of Tourisms Cordillera regional office said 55 domestic tourists who were in town during the disaster and staying in nine accommodation establishments were unharmed. They are being given assistance until they can leave.   

Communication remains a challenge since electricity has not yet been restored in the affected areas,the department said on Saturday as it appealed to tourists to suspend travel plans while clearing operations are ongoing.  

The Department of Social Welfare and Development, through its Cordillera field office, said it is providing food and non-food relief packs to affected residents.   

In a statement on Friday, the agency said it initially distributed family packs to about 500 displaced households in Barangay Amganad, Poblacion, Tam-an, Viewpoint, Bocos, and Poitan.  

Another 1,000 packs were delivered to the local government of Banaue while relief goods have also been prepositioned at the provincial satellite warehouse in Ifugao. MSJ 

Sri Lanka’s president, premier to quit over economic collapse

DEMONSTRATORS celebrate after entering the president’s house during a protest in Colombo, Sri Lanka, July 9. — REUTERS

COLOMBO — Calm returned to the streets of Sri Lanka’s commercial capital Colombo on Sunday and protesters were jubilant as President Gotabaya Rajapaksa agreed to resign after his house was stormed amid outrage over the South Asia nation’s collapsing economy.

Protesters, many wrapped in the Sri Lanka flag, swarmed into his whitewashed colonial-era residence on Saturday, jumped into the swimming pool and sat on a four-poster bed. Others set fire to the private home of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, who also agreed to resign to make way for an all-party government.

Rajapaksa, a hero of the quarter-century civil war against Tamil rebels, plans to resign on Wednesday, the parliament speaker said.

Thousands had descended on the seaside city demanding Rajapaksa resign after months of mismanaging the crisis, a dramatic escalation of largely peaceful anti-government protests on the island that sits near key shipping lanes.

On Sunday protesters were still milling about in the president’s residence, parts of which had been smashed.

Some took selfies of the polished interiors, a striking contrast to the misery many have endured. The nation of 22 million people is short of food and fuel, and inflation hit a record 54.6% in June.

Sri Lanka’s economic crisis developed after the COVID-19 pandemic hammered the tourism-reliant economy and slashed remittances from overseas workers.

It has been compounded by large and growing government debt, rising oil prices and a ban on importing chemical fertilizers last year that devastated agriculture. The fertilizer ban was reversed in November.

Rajapaksa’s “decision to step down on 13 July was taken to ensure a peaceful handover of power,” Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena said in a video statement on Saturday. “I therefore request the public to respect the law and maintain peace.”

Wickremesinghe, a six-time premier also seen as part of an uncaring ruling elite, agreed to step down, his office said. Local news channels showed a huge fire and smoke coming from his home in an affluent Colombo suburb.

Neither Rajapaksa nor Wickremesinghe were in their residences when the buildings were attacked.

Rajapaksa had left on Friday as a precaution before the planned demonstration, two defense ministry sources said. Reuters could not immediately confirm his whereabouts.

Details of a transition of power were not yet clear. The speaker had outlined proposals from a meeting of political parties on Saturday that would include parliament picking an acting president within a week.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF), which has been in talks with the Sri Lankan government for a possible $3-billion bailout, said on Sunday it was monitoring the situation closely.

“We hope for a resolution of the current situation that will allow for resumption of our dialogue on an IMF-supported program,” the global lender said in a statement.

It said it was deeply concerned about the impact of the economic crisis on the people. — Reuters

Japan ruling party set for strong election showing after Abe killing

A Japanese flag is seen as people pray next to tributes laid at the site where late former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was shot while campaigning for a parliamentary election, near Yamato-Saidaiji station in Nara, western Japan, July 8, 2022. — REUTERS/ISSEI KATO

TOKYO/NARA — Japanese voters went to the polls on Sunday for a parliamentary election that may give the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) a surge of support after the assassination of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, a dominant politician and power broker.

Abe, Japan’s longest-serving modern leader, was gunned down on Friday during a speech in support of a local candidate in the western city of Nara — a killing the political establishment condemned as an attack on democracy itself.

Turnout as of 11 a.m. (0200 GMT) was 10.44%, the Ministry of Internal Affairs said. That was up from 9.7% at the same time on the day of the last upper house election, in 2019. Media said 15.3% percent of voters had cast absentee ballots in advance.

Polls will close at 8 p.m., when initial exit poll results are expected.

“We just lost Mr. Abe. I would like the LDP to win many votes so that they can run the country in a stable manner,” said Sakae Fujishiro, a 67-year-old pensioner who cast his vote for the ruling party in Tokyo’s eastern Edogawa ward.

Elections for seats in parliament’s less powerful upper house are typically seen as a referendum on the sitting government, and opinion polls before the assassination already pointed to a strong showing for the ruling bloc led by Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, an Abe protege.

As the nation mourns, the LDP and its junior coalition partner Komeito could gain from a potential wave of sympathy votes, political analysts said.

“The ruling LDP-Komeito coalition was already on course for a solid victory,” James Brady of the Teneo consultancy said in a note. “A wave of sympathy votes now could boost the margin of victory.”

Campaigning was halted on Friday after Mr. Abe’s killing, but politicians resumed pre-election activities on Saturday.

There was an increased police presence when Mr. Kishida appeared at a campaign event in a city southwest of Tokyo and a metal detection scanner was installed at the venue — an unusual security measure in Japan.

Meanwhile, the Nara prefectural police office said on Sunday it had seized a motorcycle and a vehicle belonging to the man arrested for the shooting, Tetsuya Yamagami.

From the vehicle, police retrieved trays wrapped in aluminum foil that the suspect said he had used for drying gunpowder, and wooden boards with holes that he said he had used for test-firing his home-made weapon, according to the police office.

The unemployed 41-year-old has said he spent months planning the attack, accusing the former prime minister of links to a religious cult that he blames for his mother’s financial ruin, according to local media reports.

With the potential for a wave of sympathy votes following the slaying, a strong showing at the polls could help Mr. Kishida consolidate his rule, giving the former banker from Hiroshima a chance to carry out his goal of boosting defense spending.

It might also allow him to revise Japan’s pacifist constitution — something even the hawkish Mr. Abe was never able to achieve.

“In the months ahead, the government is certain to seek to strengthen domestic security,” Brady said. “By undermining the public’s general sense of safety and order, the event could also add further momentum to those key Abe causes like defense build-up and constitutional revision.”

PARTY POWER VACUUM
Polls last week showed the LDP winning at least 60 of the 125 seats being contested on Sunday, up from the 55 it now holds, allowing it to maintain the majority in the chamber that it holds with Komeito.

Reaching 69 seats in the upper house would give the LDP a majority, a threshold that had been seen as a stretch before Mr. Abe’s killing.

Not all voters were swayed by the assassination.

“The Kishida administration is well regarded, but if the LDP is in power too long, there will be too much collusion as a result,” said Yoshio Yamamoto, a 40-year-old civil servant who cast his vote in Tokyo’s central Nakano ward for the Democratic Party for the People.

Mr. Kishida, once on the more dovish side of the LDP, has shifted towards the right and said parts of the constitution may have elements that “are outdated and lacking”.

Opinion polls show a majority of voters favour greater military strength.

But even a strong LDP performance will be overshadowed by the murder of Abe, who as a lawmaker leading the party’s largest faction still wielded considerable strength over policy and personnel decisions.

His death raises the specter of a power vacuum and potential turmoil within the party, analysts said.

The small, populist Japan Innovation Party, which gained seats in a general election last year, could siphon off votes from the LDP. But since the party also backs constitutional revision, any advances it makes would be likely to bolster the LDP’s goals. — Reuters