logo
Japan's Defense Ministry to Create Another Senior Vice Minister Post; Aims to Boost Emergency Response Capabilities

Japan's Defense Ministry to Create Another Senior Vice Minister Post; Aims to Boost Emergency Response Capabilities

Yomiuri Shimbun20 hours ago

Yomiuri Shimbun file photo
The Defense Ministry
The Defense Ministry has decided to have two senior vice minister posts, according to several government and ruling-party sources.
The move is aimed at bolstering the ministry's ability to respond swiftly to emergencies, such as natural disasters and North Korea's repeated ballistic missile launches. It will be written into the Basic Policy on Economic and Fiscal Management and Reform to be finalized later this month.
Alongside the cabinet minister, the positions of senior vice minister and parliamentary secretary are the other two senior roles filled by political appointment. Many ministries, including the Internal Affairs and Communications Ministry and the Foreign Ministry, already operate with two senior vice ministers.
At the Defense Ministry, either the minister or the senior vice minister is normally on standby in Tokyo in case crisis management is needed. In recent years, however, the security environment surrounding Japan has worsened and demand for Self-Defense Force disaster-relief operations has grown, increasing the burden of emergency response.
After ironing out the details, the government plans to submit a bill to amend the National Government Organization Law, in which the number of senior vice ministers is stipulated, to the Diet.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Political Parties Scrambling to Use Social Media Effectively After Elections Across Japan
Political Parties Scrambling to Use Social Media Effectively After Elections Across Japan

Yomiuri Shimbun

time5 hours ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

Political Parties Scrambling to Use Social Media Effectively After Elections Across Japan

The Yomiuri Shimbun A collage of images of politicians from their social media feeds, top, and political party members at a meeting about election campaigning The Diet has been unable to implement effective measures to address confusion caused by social media during elections across the country. This is the first installment in a series that examines how political parties understand the situation, which may undermine the basis of democracy, and how they are dealing with the challenges. On the morning of April 24, a study session was held in a room on the eighth floor of the Liberal Democratic Party headquarters in Tokyo. About 20 people who lost in last year's House of Representatives election gathered for the closed meeting to study ways to return to national politics. They were stunned by what a lecturer told them, since it was largely different from traditional grassroots election campaigning that is considered the norm. 'I have never participated in Bon Festival dances or rice-cake pounding events [to collect votes]. I do not associate with industry groups either,' upper house LDP member Taro Yamada told them. 'You can get more support automatically once you are able to find supporters on social media. Then opportunities grow exponentially where your voice is heard,' Yamada said. Yamada, who uses social media more thoroughly and effectively than anybody else in the LDP, won about 540,000 votes through social media-focused activities in the 2019 House of Councillors election. Yamada said speech meetings and street campaigns provide good opportunities for video shooting. He said he instructs supporters on such occasions on how to record the gatherings with their smartphones in order to have the footage shared more widely on social media. Yamada added that printed brochures are effective when promoting the big picture of the policies you advocate. 'Social media does not work effectively if you have no policies to communicate. There is no point to that,' Yamada told the meeting participants. Ahead of the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly election in June and the upper house election in summer, all parties are scrambling to utilize social media. In the previous lower house election, such parties as the Democratic Party for the People, Reiwa Shinsengumi and Sanseito made extensive use of social media, which helped them increase their seats. The LDP, which relies on individual supporters and industry groups to garner seats, is believed to feel threatened as it lags behind in social media use. In April, the LDP had Ryosei Akazawa appear on the party's YouTube channel, instead of a television program, apparently in an aim to attract young voters. The minister in charge of economic revitalization was in the spotlight as he had just returned from tariff negotiations in the United States. The LDP's coalition partner Komeito, which is struggling with the aging of members of its support body Soka Gakkai, is in a similar situation. Komeito has tried to attract attention by releasing videos with titles such as 'Disclosure of Diet members' paycheck stubs' and 'The relationship between Komeito and Soka Gakkai.' The party apparently counted on the spread of those videos. While political parties are busily involved in the making of videos they hope will go viral, measures have not been taken to deal with false and misleading information on social media that was often seen during last year's lower house, Hyogo and Tokyo gubernatorial elections. In January, two months after the Hyogo gubernatorial election, discussions began between the ruling and opposition parties to counter such false and misleading information. But after six meetings, as of May 27, the changes made were nothing more than the introduction of new regulations requiring election posters to maintain dignity, and an increase in compensation for campaign workers during the election period, among other things. In February, the LDP proposed a set of items to be discussed regarding social media. They included the handling of commercial activities disguised as election campaigning and clarifying the responsibilities of companies that operate social media platforms. The LDP also called for discussions on the revision of the law concerning information distribution platforms. However, no concrete discussions have been held. Only limited consultations have been held with platform operators. 'Parties may invite criticism online if they take concrete steps toward regulation. They probably do not want to get the raw end of the deal by leading discussions and sparking an uproar online,' said a government official involved in the party talks. All parties cite the necessity of taking freedom of expression into account as the reason for their cautious approach to taking measures against false and misleading information. During a debate by party members regarding social media and elections on an NHK program aired on May 3, all participating lawmakers mentioned free expression more than 20 times in total. They argued that regulations on social media may lead to censorship. But Meiji University Prof. Harumichi Yuasa questioned the claim, saying that the existing Public Offices Election Law already severely restricts freedom of expression. As Yuasa said, Article 142 of the law specifies in detail the number of pages and size of election campaign leaflets that candidates distribute. Article 148 stipulates in a provision that media outlets must not 'undermine the fairness of elections by abusing freedom of expression by way of publishing distorted facts or false information, for instance.' 'It is not fair that social media operators are not subject to any regulations,' the expert on information law said. It is certain that new measures against false and misleading information on social media will not be implemented by June 22, when the current Diet session ends. The possibility is high that upcoming Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly and upper house elections will face challenges regarding social media.

Secretaries General of LDP, Komeito Agree to Issue Cash Handouts; ¥1 Quadrillion GDP by 2040 Sought by Ishiba
Secretaries General of LDP, Komeito Agree to Issue Cash Handouts; ¥1 Quadrillion GDP by 2040 Sought by Ishiba

Yomiuri Shimbun

time18 hours ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

Secretaries General of LDP, Komeito Agree to Issue Cash Handouts; ¥1 Quadrillion GDP by 2040 Sought by Ishiba

The Yomiuri Shimbun Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba speaks at the Prime Minister's Office on Monday. As a measure against high prices, the secretaries general of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and coalition partner Komeito have agreed on providing cash handouts to the public, funding them through tax revenue, according to an LDP executive member who attended the meeting. LDP Secretary General Hiroshi Moriyama and his Komeito counterpart Makoto Nishida met to discuss the matter in Tokyo on Tuesday morning. The two parties intend to discuss details including the size of the handouts, when the provision should be started and whether to set an income limit for receiving them, at a later meeting with their policy research council chairpersons, among other members, also in attendance. 'As the public are struggling due to high prices, if tax revenue increases, we must find some way of returning the money to them,' Tetsushi Sakamoto, chairperson of the LDP's Diet Affairs Committee, who attended the meeting, told reporters. The LDP intends to include the provision of several tens of thousands of yen per capita in cash as a measure against high prices in its campaign pledges for this summer's House of Councillors election, according to senior party members. 'We would like to consider viable, immediately effective handouts,' said Seiji Kihara, chairperson of the LDP's Election Strategy Committee, in Shizuoka City on Monday. As a way to quickly issue the funds, a proposal has been floated to provide them through bank accounts linked to My Number identification cards. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, who is also LDP president, met with LDP party executives, including Moriyama and Policy Research Council Chairperson Itsunori Onodera, in the Diet building on Monday. There he instructed the executives to have raising Japan's nominal gross domestic product to ¥1 quadrillion by 2040 and an over 50% increase in the average income by that year be the party's top pledge for the upcoming election. The nominal GDP for fiscal 2024 was ¥616.9 trillion. 'I'd like to share a specific image of a strong economy with the public,' Ishiba told reporters at the Prime Minister's Office the same day.

Japan's defense minister: Govt. contacts China over aircraft carriers' activity
Japan's defense minister: Govt. contacts China over aircraft carriers' activity

NHK

time20 hours ago

  • NHK

Japan's defense minister: Govt. contacts China over aircraft carriers' activity

Japan's Defense Minister Nakatani Gen says the government has asked China for consideration following the dispatch of both of its aircraft carriers to the Pacific Ocean. The Japanese Defense Ministry announced on Monday that the Liaoning and the Shandong, which are China's only two active aircraft carriers, were spotted near Japan between Saturday and Monday. The ministry said it was the first time the two carriers have simultaneously entered the Pacific. Speaking to reporters after a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Nakatani said the ministry suspects that China's navy is trying to improve the operational capabilities of the warships, including their long-range functions. He added that the government has used a diplomatic channel to convey to China a request not to make its naval activities a threat to Japan's security. The defense minister also said the government will continue its caution and surveillance of the situation and will disclose relevant information appropriately. He added that the government also continues to demonstrate its will and capacity to prevent any attempt to change the status quo unilaterally and by force. Nakatani indicated that the government is planning to deploy a mobile surveillance radar system on remote islands in the Pacific.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store