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Viewing cable 09TOKYO1485, JAPANESE MORNING PRESS HIGHLIGHTS 07/01/09

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
09TOKYO1485 2009-07-01 00:52 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Tokyo
VZCZCXRO2946
PP RUEHFK RUEHKSO RUEHNAG RUEHNH
DE RUEHKO #1485/01 1820052
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 010052Z JUL 09
FM AMEMBASSY TOKYO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 4215
INFO RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC PRIORITY
RHEHAAA/THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEAWJA/USDOJ WASHDC PRIORITY
RULSDMK/USDOT WASHDC PRIORITY
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHDC//J5//
RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RHHMHBA/COMPACFLT PEARL HARBOR HI
RHMFIUU/HQ PACAF HICKAM AFB HI//CC/PA//
RHMFIUU/USFJ //J5/JO21//
RUYNAAC/COMNAVFORJAPAN YOKOSUKA JA
RUAYJAA/CTF 72
RUEHNH/AMCONSUL NAHA 7295
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA 4964
RUEHOK/AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE 8767
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA 2500
RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO 5487
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 0191
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 6222
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 5910
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 13 TOKYO 001485 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR E, P, EB, EAP/J, EAP/P, EAP/PD, PA; 
WHITE HOUSE/NSC/NEC; JUSTICE FOR STU CHEMTOB IN ANTI-TRUST DIVISION; 
TREASURY/OASIA/IMI/JAPAN; DEPT PASS USTR/PUBLIC AFFAIRS OFFICE; 
SECDEF FOR JCS-J-5/JAPAN, 
DASD/ISA/EAPR/JAPAN; DEPT PASS ELECTRONICALLY TO USDA 
FAS/ITP FOR SCHROETER; PACOM HONOLULU FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY ADVISOR; 
CINCPAC FLT/PA/ COMNAVFORJAPAN/PA. 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: OIIP KMDR KPAO PGOV PINR ECON ELAB JA
 
SUBJECT: JAPANESE MORNING PRESS HIGHLIGHTS 07/01/09 
 
Index: 
1) Top headlines 
2) Editorials 
3) Prime Minister's daily schedule  (Nikkei) 
 
Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) in action: 
4) DPJ President Yukio Hatoyama's political group took 21.77 million 
yen in false donations: Hatoyama apologizes, refuses to resign, and 
blames secretary  (Asahi) 
5) DPJ rattled by still another president threatened by a money 
scandal  (Asahi) 
6) DPJ manifesto resurrects party's promise to scrap the gasoline 
tax  (Mainichi) 
7) Prime Minister Aso criticizes DPJ's foreign policy  (Yomiuri) 
 
Prime Minister Aso on the run: 
8) Prime Minister Aso to shuffle his cabinet tomorrow, set Diet 
dissolution for July 17, while moves in his party to dump him 
continue to accelerate  (Sankei) 
9) Popular Miyazaki governor may be in Aso Cabinet (Mainichi) 
10) Lower House election may take place on August 8  (Yomiuri) 
11) Prime Minister Aso seen as changing his tune ever day: One day 
he is thinking about shuffling, the next day he is not  (Tokyo 
Shimbun) 
12) Moves in the DPJ to topple Aso continue to escalate  (Asahi) 
13) Diet may end in a full frontal assault on the opposition by the 
prime minister's side, with Tokyo assembly election on July 12 as 
major LDP hurdle  (Yomiuri) 
 
14) Budget ceiling set at 52.7 trillion yen in outlays  (Asahi) 
 
15) Government explains in Diet why setting the boundaries in sea 
straits is in national interest  (Yomiuri) 
 
16) Is the proper native word for Japan Nihon or Nippon?  (Yomiuri) 
 
 
Articles: 
 
1) TOP HEADLINES 
 
Asahi: 
Prime minister expresses intention to implement LDP executive, 
cabinet changes 
 
Mainichi: 
Prime minister mulling giving Miyazaki Governor Higashikokubaru 
portfolio on decentralization 
 
Yomiuri: 
Prime minister eyes change of cabinet members next week; Plan 
emerging for Aug. 8 Lower House election 
 
Nikkei & Sankei: 
Prime minister considers new appointments for three LDP executives, 
cabinet posts tomorrow, eyeing Diet dissolution after Tokyo assembly 
election 
 
Tokyo Shimbun: 
Government to approve guidelines for budgetary requests for fiscal 
2010 setting general expenditures at record high of 52.7 trillion 
yen 
 
TOKYO 00001485  002 OF 013 
 
 
 
Akahata: 
Ratio of job offers drops to record low of 0.44, unemployment rate 
rises to 5.2 PERCENT  in May 
 
2) EDITORIALS 
 
Asahi: 
(1) Aso should seek people's judgment as soon as possible 
(2) Minamata disease legislation: Issue must be considered 
thoroughly 
 
Mainichi: 
(1) Job market worsening: Long-term perspective needed 
(2) Approach to governors for general election: Present specific 
decentralization vision 
 
Yomiuri: 
(1) Government must acknowledge presence of secret nuke deal 
(2) Guidelines for budgetary requests: Full consideration to 
economic conditions needed 
 
Nikkei: 
(1) Murata's testimony on "secret nuke deal" mirrors part of 
cold-war history 
(2) DPJ Hatoyama assumes heavy responsibility for false reports of 
donations 
 
Sankei: 
(1) Emperor and Empress to leave for Canada, Hawaii: Their health 
conditions must be fully considered 
(2) New donation scandal: DPJ Hatoyama cannot avoid responsibility 
 
Tokyo Shimbun: 
(1) Deteriorating job market: Government urged to prepare full 
rescue measures 
(2) GM to withdraw from merger plan with Toyota: Industry entering 
age of competition 
 
Akahata: 
(1) 2009 World Conference for the Prohibition of Atom and Hydrogen 
Bombs: Build nuclear-free world by activating campaign 
 
3) Prime Minister's Official Residence (Kantei) 
 
Prime Minister's schedule, June 30 
 
NIKKEI (Page 2) (Full) 
July 1, 2009 
 
09:10 Conference for promotion of measures against information 
harmful to young people and improvement of the environment on the 
Internet at Diet; followed by cabinet meeting; Minister of Economy, 
Trade, and Industry Nikai stayed behind 
10:00 Met Minister for Administrative Reform Amari 
10:26 Arrived at Prime Minister's Official Residence 
12:21 Met special adviser to LDP president Shimamura 
13:00 Met Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Uruma; followed by Deputy 
Ministers of Foreign Affairs Sasae, Otabe 
14:07 Met Public Security Investigation Agency Director General 
Kitada; followed by government-labor meeting with Rengo President 
Tsuyoshi Takagi; Labor Minister Masuzoe, Chief Cabinet Secretary 
 
TOKYO 00001485  003 OF 013 
 
 
Kawamura, Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Uruma also present 
15:07 Met Assistant Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Fukuda 
16:28 Met Chief Cabinet Secretary Kawamura; followed by 
government-ruling parties meeting on FY2010 budget request 
guidelines; Minister of the Economy Nikai, LDP General Council 
Chairman Sasagawa, Election Strategy Council Chairman Koga stayed 
behind 
17:28 Speech at forum sponsored by Japan Institute of International 
Affairs at Imperial Hotel 
18:49 Met past managing directors of Junior Chamber Japan at "Baron 
Okura" bar, Hotel Okura 
20:08 Met ex-PM Mori at Chinese restaurant "Tokarin," Hotel Okura 
21:50 Arrived at official residential quarters 
 
4) Hatoyama received 21.77 million yen in false donations, denies 
intention to resign, explaining that false entries were made as 
secretary's own decision 
 
ASAHI (Page 1) (Abridged slightly) 
July 1, 2009 
 
Yukio Hatoyama, president of the major opposition Democratic Party 
of Japan (DPJ), held a press conference in the Diet building 
yesterday. He announced the results of an investigation into an 
incident in which the names of deceased people and individuals who 
claimed they had never made donations were used in political funds 
reports by his fund management organization named Yuai Seikei 
Konwakai (Fraternal Politics and Economics Discussion Council). At 
the conference, Hatoyama admitted to the false statements, while 
indicating that the decisions were made independently by his 
state-paid secretary responsible for accounting. He also added that 
he will not stand down as DPJ president. Hatoyama explained that he 
himself was the source of the funds falsely listed on the 
statements. 
 
The ruling bloc is set to pursue Hatoyama's political responsibility 
maintaining that what the secretary did was a violation of the 
Political Funds Control Law. The ruling coalition is also asking for 
evidence that falsely claimed donations actually came from Hatoyama 
as well as for details. The DPJ now has a new source of trouble with 
the next general election approaching. 
 
The press conference was also attended by Hatoyama's lawyer who 
investigated the incident. The state-paid secretary was responsible 
for accounting under Hatoyama's policy secretary who is the chief 
accountant. The state-paid secretary allegedly told the lawyer that 
he had put on the fund statements the names of dozens of 
individuals, including deceased people, annually from before 2005. 
He also allegedly explained the donations: "The organization should 
have directly asked for donations, but we failed to do that, so I 
repeatedly made false entries in the reports." 
 
To make up for the donations the fund management body did not 
receive, the secretary used Hatoyama's personal funds that were 
supposed to be used when his political funds ran short. False 
donations amounted to 4 - 7 million yen annually and a total of 
21.778 million yen in 193 cases during a four-year period starting 
in 2005. About 90 people's names were used. The secretary did not 
reveal this fact either to Hatoyama or the policy secretary, 
according to Hatoyama. 
 
Hatoyama offered an apology to the public and announced that he has 
 
TOKYO 00001485  004 OF 013 
 
 
dismissed the secretary in question and filed corrected fund reports 
stipulating that the false donations were loaned by him. Asked about 
his responsibility, Hatoyama said that he will fulfill his 
responsibility by thoroughly performing his duties as DPJ president, 
while admitting his oversight responsibility. 
 
Hatoyama also explained about the secretary's motive, "I think 
because the amount of individual donations to me was so small that 
the secretary wanted to keep that fact from me so as not to make any 
trouble." The lawyer, too, indicated that the secretary tried to 
make it appear that Hatoyama collected a large amount of individual 
donations for the aim of defending the secretary himself. 
 
Although Hatoyama held a regular press conference at party 
headquarters yesterday afternoon, he drew a clear line between being 
a lawmaker and DPJ president by also holding a press conference at 
the Lower House Lawmakers' Office Building conference room to offer 
an explanation. 
 
5) DPJ President Hatoyama's illegal donation scandal has shocked and 
shaken party; LDP-New Komeito ruling coalition intends to grill 
Hatoyama 
 
ASAHI (Page 4) (Excerpts) 
July 1, 2009 
 
The Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) has had smooth sailing since May 
when Yukio Hatoyama was elected as party president. However, it is 
now unveiled that Hatoyama's state-paid secretary made false 
statements in Hatoyama's fund management organization's fund reports 
using the names of deceased people. Like his predecessor, Ichiro 
Ozawa, Hatoyama is now busy in dealing with a "politics and money" 
issue.  Hatoyama, a prospective candidate for next prime minister, 
has exposed his lowered guard. The ruling camp, which is lagging 
behind in public approval ratings, intends to strengthen criticism 
against the DPJ with an eye on the next House of Representatives 
election. The DPJ's crisis management capability will likely be 
called into question again. 
 
Hatoyama said yesterday at a press conference in which he revealed 
the results of investigations with the attendance of a lawyer: "I 
was thoughtless. My confidence in the secretary was at fault. It is 
extremely regrettable that the secretary, who has worked for me for 
a long time (made the false reports)," emphasizing that the false 
donations were made by his state-funded secretary. 
 
The false fund reports issue was discovered by an Asahi Shimbun 
report on June 16. Hatoyama conducted the investigation on his own 
decision. He held the press conference after his regular meeting 
with the press at the party's headquarters. 
 
Hatoyama is a DPJ leader who advocated abolishing corporate 
political donations and expanding individual contributions. In an 
attempt to defuse a negative impact on the Lower House election 
campaign, he hurried to announce the results of the investigations. 
However, some in the DPJ are concerned about a negative effect on 
the upcoming Shizuoka gubernatorial election and Tokyo assembly 
election, which the party considers prelude to the Lower House 
election. 
 
Meanwhile, the ruling parties criticized Hatoyama's press meeting. 
LDP Election Strategy Council Deputy Chairman Yoshihide Suga pointed 
 
TOKYO 00001485  005 OF 013 
 
 
out: "That violates the Political Funds Control Law. I want to seek 
to clarify where the contribution money comes from. There is a 
possibility of tax evasion." Kunio Hatoyama, former internal affairs 
and communications minister, also made a critical comment: "The DPJ 
is no longer qualified to discuss political funds issues." 
 
LDP Secretary General Hiroyuki Hosoda revealed a policy of pursuing 
the issue, saying: "It is a huge amount. There are several persons 
who have made false reports." 
 
Some in the DPJ are calling for punishment against Hatoyama to take 
responsibility. DPJ Secretary General Katsuya Okada stated after 
Hatoyama's press meeting: "He has fulfilled his accountability. His 
explanation was convincible." There is a possibility that there will 
be discord in the party depending on how the public responds to the 
DPJ's handling of the matter. 
 
6) DPJ decides to abolish provisional gas tax rate next April: 
Secretary General Okada gives in to Hatoyama 
 
MAINICHI (Page 1) (Full) 
July 1, 2009 
 
In connection with its manifesto for the next Lower House election, 
the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) decided on June 30 to abolish 
the provisional gas tax rate in April 2010, if it takes the reins of 
government. Secretary General Katusya Okada had been calling for 
putting off the timetable until after fiscal 2011, citing that the 
provisional rate should be scrapped, coinciding with the 
establishment of an environment tax. However, he has given in to 
President Hatoyama, who is calling for following the immediate 
abolition policy adopted when Ichiro Ozawa was president. 
 
As a result, key policies that the DPJ would implement in fiscal 
2010, the initial year after it takes the reins of government, will 
include the abolition of the provisional gas tax rate, child 
benefits (partial), toll-free highways (partial), employment 
measures including a system of assisting job seekers, measures for 
medical services, and free high school education, totaling 
approximately 7 trillion yen. The DPJ intends to include in the 
manifest policies to be realized in four years after it seizes 
power. A farm household income compensation system and the full 
implementation of child benefits will be included in fiscal 2013. 
This brings the total amount of policy measures included in the 
manifesto to roughly 17 trillion yen. 
 
Okada had been insisting on forgoing the abolition of the gas tax 
rate, because he had attached importance to securing permanent 
funding resources. As fiscal resources to finance its own policies, 
which cost about 17 trillion yen, the DPJ plans to secure about 9 
trillion yen, by slashing wasteful spending of tax money, as well as 
revising special tax measures and appropriating profits on the 
management of funds in various special accounts. Scrapping the 
provisional gas tax rate from the initial year requires separate 
explanations on how to secure funding resources, such as speeding up 
the pace of cutting wasteful spending. 
 
Participants in the executive meeting held on the 30th at the party 
headquarters with Hatoyama and Ozawa in attendance agreed to a 
policy of immediately abolishing the provisional tax rate. Hatoyama 
during a press conference held the same day said: "We have many 
times vowed to scrap the rate right after the DPJ takes the reins of 
 
TOKYO 00001485  006 OF 013 
 
 
government. People would not accept it if we prolonged the 
implementation of our pledge for a year or two due to the problem of 
funding resources." 
 
7) PM Aso criticizes DPJ foreign policy as "all concepts" 
 
YOMIURI (Page 2) (Abridged) 
July 1, 2009 
 
Prime Minister Taro Aso gave a speech at a forum sponsored by the 
Japan Institute of International Affairs held at a hotel in Tokyo on 
June 30. He voiced strong criticism of the foreign and security 
policies of the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), saying: "They are 
all concepts. When it comes to concrete issues, they only oppose or 
defer taking a position." 
 
Citing the DPJ's opposition to the amendment to the new special 
antiterrorism measures law, which extends the refueling mission of 
the Maritime Self-Defense Force in the Indian Ocean for one year, 
and the anti-piracy law to deal with pirates in waters off Somalia, 
Aso pointed out that, "They opposed or objected to both, which are 
important choices for Japan as a country." Commenting on former DPJ 
President Ichiro Ozawa's statement that "the U.S. Navy's Seventh 
Fleet alone will be sufficient for U.S. presence in the Far East," 
Aso said: "This will cut back the Japan-U.S. security arrangements 
significantly and greatly diminished the deterrence provided by the 
United States to Japan." 
 
With the next House of Representatives election approaching, the 
prime minister is criticizing the DPJ to elucidate the difference of 
its foreign policy (with the ruling parties) in order to call its 
governing ability into question. 
 
8) Aso to shuffle cabinet tomorrow 
 
SANKEI (Top play) (Abridged) 
July 1, 2009 
 
Prime Minister Taro Aso made up his mind yesterday to shuffle his 
cabinet tomorrow. But it is uncertain whether Aso can change his 
ruling Liberal Democratic Party's executive lineup in the face of 
opposition from within the party. Meanwhile, Aso will not dissolve 
the House of Representatives tomorrow and is instead seeking to 
dissolve it after July 17 when the Emperor returns from his visit to 
Canada and Hawaii. The election for the House of Representatives is 
expected to be announced on July 28, with voting and vote-counting 
set for Aug. 9. Aso intends to shuffle his cabinet without being a 
slave to what his LDP predecessors used to do, and he will promote a 
new image for the LDP. 
 
Aso, if he shuffles his cabinet, is expected to retain key 
ministers, including Foreign Minister Hirofumi Nakasone and Finance 
Minister Kaoru Yosano. Even if Aso changes the LDP's executive 
lineup, Election Strategy Council Chairman Makoto Koga and Diet 
Affairs Committee Chairman Tadamori Oshima are expected to be 
retained. 
 
However, anti-Aso groups in the LDP are moving to hold a meeting of 
all LDP lawmakers right after the July 12 Tokyo metropolitan 
assembly election. On that occasion, they will call for Aso to step 
down. A small-scale shuffle of the cabinet may fail to ease 
dissatisfaction in the LDP. 
 
TOKYO 00001485  007 OF 013 
 
 
 
"I will decide myself to appoint appropriate persons for posts at an 
appropriate time," Aso told reporters yesterday evening at his 
office. On June 29, Aso had said, "At this point, it's not on my 
mind." 
 
Aso met with former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at his official 
residence on the evening of June 24. After that, Aso had plans to 
carry out a large-scale shuffle of his cabinet before July 3 when 
the Emperor leaves Japan for Canada. 
 
However, the anti-Aso groups, based on that move, geared up to dump 
Aso. Former LDP Secretary General Hidenao Nakagawa, one of their 
leaders, called for Aso to step down, declaring that Aso should make 
an "honorable decision." On June 30, Taku Yamamoto and other LDP 
lawmakers from the House of Representatives began to collect 
signatures for a joint plenary meeting of all LDP lawmakers in both 
houses of the Diet on July 13 after the Tokyo metropolitan assembly 
election. 
 
9) Adjustments under way to give ministerial post on 
decentralization to Miyazaki Governor Higashikokubaru 
 
MAINICHI (Top Play) (Full) 
July 1, 2009 
 
It was learned on June 30 that Prime Minister Taro Aso is mulling 
giving a ministerial post to Miyazaki Prefectural Governor 
Higashikokubaru. The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) is putting out a 
feeler about fielding him as an official candidate in the upcoming 
Lower House election. The prime minister intends to make cabinet 
appointments within the next couple of days in order to relieve 
cabinet ministers who concurrently serve in plural posts of their 
extra duties. He is now making adjustments with the possibility of 
giving Higashikokubaru a post on decentralization. The aim is to 
counter the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) by putting up 
Higashikokubaru, who is highly popular among the public, as a key 
person in the election. 
 
Cabinet ministers to be appointed as early as tomorrow 
 
Referring to cabinet appointments, the prime minister on June 30 
told reporters, "I have been thinking of appointing appropriate 
persons at an appropriating timing." LDP Election Committee Chairman 
Makoto Koga on June 29 met with Chief Cabinet Secretary Takeo 
Kawamura in the Diet building. He conveyed to him that 
Higashikokubaru will run for the next Lower House election on the 
LDP ticket. They agreed to shortly set a meeting between the prime 
minister and Higashikokubaru. Koga and Kawamura also conferred on a 
ministerial post to be given to Higashikokubaru. The LDP will likely 
put him first on the list for the Tokyo proportional representation 
bloc. 
 
Following their meeting, the prime minister met with Chief Cabinet 
Secretary Kawamura at the Kantei. A plan to appoint Higashikokubaru 
as internal affairs minister, a post in charge of local 
administration, has been floated. However, the prime minister wants 
Tsutomu Sato to continue as minister of internal affairs, 
communications, national public safety chairman, state minister for 
Okinawa, Northern Territories affairs and disaster management. It 
appears that they are looking into appointing Higashikokubaru as a 
minister for decentralization or a minister without portfolio. 
 
TOKYO 00001485  008 OF 013 
 
 
Higashikokubaru is not reportedly dwelling on the post for internal 
affairs. 
 
When Higashikokubaru met with Koga on June 23, he made the inclusion 
of a set of requests by the Association of Prefectural Governors 
into the LDP's manifesto a condition for his running in the 
election. Adjustments of views are now under way for the inclusion 
of such in general outline. The prime minister will start cabinet 
appointments once the budget request guidelines for fiscal 2010 are 
approved at a cabinet meeting, and hold an attestation ceremony on 
the 2nd. 
 
10) Prime Minister eyes cabinet roster change possibly next week; 
Plan emerges for Aug. 8 Lower House election 
 
YOMIURI (Top play) (Abridged slightly) 
July 1, 2009 
 
Prime Minister Taro Aso plans to shuffle his cabinet as early as 
next week for strengthening the campaign setup for the upcoming 
House of Representative election. In addition to the option of 
dissolving the Lower House immediately after the July 12 Tokyo 
Metropolitan Assembly poll for a Lower House election on Aug. 2, a 
plan has now emerged to carry out a rare Saturday vote on Aug. 8. 
Some Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) lawmakers are openly making 
moves to unseat Aso and debate has been reignited in the party on 
whether to shuffle the LDP executives ahead of the envisaged Lower 
House dissolution. The LDP is in turmoil. 
 
Meeting the press corps at the Prime Minister's Official Residence 
(Kantei) last evening, Prime Minister Aso said: "A variety of 
factors change every day regarding the timing of dissolving the 
Lower House. I will make a decision at the appropriate time." He 
also expressed his eagerness to shuffle the LDP executives and his 
cabinet once the party's consent is obtained, saying: "I will make a 
decision. I have been thinking about the right timing and the right 
people." 
 
Last night, Aso held separate meetings with Tsushima faction head 
Yuji Tsushima and former Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori at a Tokyo 
hotel. In their meeting, Tsushima and Aso agreed on the need to 
shuffle the cabinet to add new ministers to it. Reportedly, the 
question of shuffling the party executive lineup did not crop up in 
their meeting. 
 
At present, Kaoru Yosano is concurrently serving as finance 
minister, financial services minister, and economic and fiscal 
policy minister; and Tsutomu Sato as national public safety chairman 
and internal affairs and communications minister responsible for 
decentralization. The envisaged cabinet shuffle is aimed at 
relieving those ministers from multiple posts. A plan is being 
mentioned to let Yosano continue to serve as finance minister and 
financial services minister and appoint a new person as economic and 
fiscal policy minister. There is also a possibility to appoint a new 
minister to take over some of Sato's portfolios. 
 
Among those close to Aso, a plan is being talked about for the Prime 
Minister to announce the dissolution either on July 6 before his 
departure for the July 8-10 G8 summit in Italy or during the G8 
summit. The purpose is to clarify the intent to dissolve the Lower 
House under Prime Minister Aso regardless of the result of the Tokyo 
election. 
 
TOKYO 00001485  009 OF 013 
 
 
 
Meanwhile, New Komeito Election Strategy Council Chairman Yosuke 
Takagi, appearing on a CS program last night, expressed a dismissive 
view about the idea of announcing the dissolution in advance, 
saying, "The option is not really pragmatic." 
 
The Prime Minister has begun reconsidering the option of shuffling 
the party executive lineup based on his aides' advice to appoint 
persons who could become the "face" of the Lower House election. But 
the possibility has become stronger that the Prime Minister will 
give up the plan in the end due to fierce objections from within the 
party. 
 
At an LDP Executive Council meeting yesterday, many voiced 
opposition to changing the executive lineup. 
 
11) Aso wavering over party, cabinet shuffle 
 
TOKYO SHIMBUN (Page 1) (Full) 
July 1, 2009 
 
Prime Minister Taro Aso is straying from what he previously said 
about shuffling his ruling Liberal Democratic Party's executive 
lineup and his cabinet's lineup. Aso denied it two days ago. 
However, Aso said yesterday he had been thinking about it, sounding 
as if to say he has changed his mind. LDP lawmakers close to Aso are 
also criticizing him for his wavering mind. 
 
"I will decide this matter by myself," Aso told reporters yesterday 
at his office when asked if he would shuffle the LDP and cabinet 
lineups. "I have been thinking about appointing appropriate persons 
at an appropriate time," Aso added. This is the first time for Aso 
to sound as if he wants to shuffle the party and cabinet lineups. 
 
Aso told reporters on June 29, "At this point, it's not on my mind." 
The LDP, which was fretting about Aso's intentions, took this remark 
to indicate that Aso had made up his mind to forgo party and cabinet 
personnel changes. 
 
"I have no idea what's going on in the prime minister's mind," said 
one of the LDP's executives in a position to support Aso. "I haven't 
heard from the prime minister that he wants to change the party's 
executive lineup," LDP Diet Affairs Committee Chairman Tadamori 
Oshima said, adding, "I don't think he will do so." Oshima was 
irritated, and he declared that Aso would not change the LDP's 
executive lineup. LDP General Council Chairman Takashi Sasagawa 
exploded into angry words toward Aso when he was asked by reporters 
about the possibility of personnel changes. "I'm saying he will not 
do so," Sasagawa said. The idea of shuffling the party and cabinet 
lineups, which was expected to boost the Aso administration, has 
weakened the LDP's unity. 
 
12) Movement to oust Aso accelerating; Internal friction 
intensifying in LDP 
 
ASAHI (Page 4) (Abridged slightly) 
July 1, 2009 
 
Moves to remove Prime Minister Taro Aso from office are growing in 
the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP). In order to call on the 
party leadership to hold a general meeting of all the LDP lawmakers 
from both Diet chambers, some members began collecting signatures 
 
TOKYO 00001485  010 OF 013 
 
 
yesterday. Meanwhile, a group to prevent the anti-Aso movement from 
spreading was formed. Disarray in the LDP is deepening. 
 
In a liaison conference yesterday of the LDP executives, Yoshinobu 
Shimamura, special advisor to Aso, made a remark seeking to contain 
the anti-Aso movement, saying: "There are some calling for moving up 
the presidential election. I want the party leadership to supervise 
them." However, LDP Reform Implementation Headquarters Chairman 
Tsutomu Takebe, who has distanced himself from Aso, reacted 
strongly, arguing: "We must give consideration to the feelings of 
young lawmakers." 
 
House of Representatives member Taku Yamamoto, who has collected 
signatures for an early LDP leadership race, yesterday started 
collecting signatures calling for holding an LDP general election on 
July 13 after the July 12 Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly election. He 
has changed the strategy because he will not be able to seek an 
early LDP presidential election if the Lower House is dissolved. 
 
A party rule stipulates that it is possible to hold a general 
meeting if more than one-third of the LDP lawmakers approves. The 
purpose of holding a general meeting is to make a strategic move to 
oust Aso, with one anti-Aso group member saying: "There will be 
nobody who opposes the call for holding a general meeting to hear 
the Prime Minister's view." 
 
A group of young lawmakers who have been working on drafting an 
independent manifesto (campaign pledges) held a meeting yesterday. 
About 20 members attended yesterday's session. Lower House member 
Yukari Sato stressed in the meeting: "It is important to conduct a 
presidential election based on a manifesto and elect a new leader 
before the Lower House election." House of Councillors member Ichita 
Yamamoto, however, told the press corps: "I am opposed to changing 
our president at this stage." 
 
Yesterday the "Unity Association," a group supporting Aso, held a 
meeting. One member said in the meeting: "They consider the Prime 
Minister an election campaign mascot. We owe it to the public to 
take responsibility for the leader we elected." 
 
13) Aso to attempt to dissolve Diet with frontal breakthrough, 
facing Tokyo assembly election, other hurdles 
 
YOMIURI (Page 2) (Full) 
July 1, 2009 
 
Prime Minister Taro Aso is poised to dissolve the House of 
Representatives after the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly election (July 
12) to counter moves in the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) to "dump 
Aso" with a frontal breakthrough. However, there are certain hurdles 
to the prime minister's exercising his power to dissolve the Diet. 
 
Aso's strategy for Diet dissolution is to win in the Shizuoka 
gubernatorial election (July 5) and the Tokyo election and ride on 
this momentum to go into the Lower House election. With the term of 
office of Lower House members expiring shortly (on September 10), it 
appears that he also wants to avoid giving the impression of "being 
forced into dissolving the Diet" and show that he is "facing off the 
Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ)." (government source) 
 
However, the ruling parties' candidate, former House of Councillors 
member Yukiko Sakamoto, and the candidate of the DPJ, the Social 
 
TOKYO 00001485  011 OF 013 
 
 
Democratic Party, and the People's New Party Heita Kawakatsu, a 
former university president, are fighting a close contest in the 
Shizuoka election, while there is an opinion that it will be a tough 
battle for the ruling bloc to win a majority of seats in the Tokyo 
Metropolitan Assembly (64), which they have set as their criterion 
for victory. 
 
Another key issue is the additional cabinet appointments 
contemplated by the prime minister. If problems are found with the 
new ministers, the prime minister's responsibility will be 
questioned for making the appointments. 
 
If the ruling camp loses the Shizuoka and Tokyo elections, calls for 
Aso to step down are certain to grow stronger because LDP members 
will claim that, "We cannot fight the election under Prime Minister 
Aso." There is even a possibility that he will be unable to dissolve 
the Diet. 
 
Junior LDP Diet members who are scheming to "dump Aso" express hopes 
for his voluntary resignation: "If the ruling parties lose the Tokyo 
Metropolitan Assembly election, even the bullish prime minister will 
probably give in." However, Aso's aides stress that: "No matter how 
tough the situation is, the prime minister will never resign. He 
will definitely dissolve the Diet." 
 
Talking to reporters about calls in the LDP for him to resign at the 
Prime Minister's Official Residence on June 30, Aso said" I think 
now is the time for us to unite as one." 
 
Meanwhile, holding the Lower House election on August 8 has emerged 
as a compromise proposal, since in case the Diet is dissolved right 
after the Tokyo election, holding the election on August 2 will give 
too little time for preparations, and August 9 marks the anniversary 
of Nagasaki's atomic bombing, which needs to be avoided. 
 
Of the 23 postwar Lower House elections, only six were not held on a 
Sunday, and the most recent one was on December 27, 1969. 
 
14) Government to approve guidelines for fiscal 2010 budgetary 
requests today, setting general outlays at 52.7 trillion yen 
 
ASAHI (Page 1) (Slightly abridged) 
July 1, 2009 
 
The government and the ruling camp approved at a policy meeting 
yesterday a set of policy guidelines for budgetary requests by 
government agencies for fiscal 2010. The Finance Ministry has set 
Japan's general expenditures at 52.7 trillion yen. This figure is 
940 billion yen more than that in the initial state budget for 
fiscal 2009 and is an all-time high. Expenses for public works 
projects and defense affairs will shrink by 1 PERCENT  to 3 PERCENT 
below the figures in the previous fiscal year, but the government's 
plan to curb spending on social security programs has been dropped. 
 
The government has set the multiyear goal of curbing natural 
increases in social security costs by 220 billion yen a year in 
accordance with what was proposed in the government's 2006 economic 
and fiscal policy guidelines. But the government decided to do away 
with the goal for next fiscal year. Anticipating that social 
security spending will increase by 1.9 trillion yen reflecting such 
factors as the nation turning into aging society, the ministry has 
set aside 25.9 trillion yen as social welfare outlays. The ministry 
 
TOKYO 00001485  012 OF 013 
 
 
will continue such retrenchment measures as a 3 PERCENT  yearly cut 
in public works outlays and a uniform 1 PERCENT  reduction from 
year-ago grant levels to state-run universities and subsidies for 
private schools, but the reduced amount is not enough to cover the 
increased portion of social security outlays. 
 
About 350 billion yen, up 20 billion yen from that in the previous 
fiscal year, has been set aside to finance top-priority measures 
(aimed at coping with the deteriorated economy and the like). The 
money will be used as medical and public works expenditures. The 
budget guidelines also include 650 billion yen in economic emergency 
reserve funds (1 trillion yen in fiscal 2009) to prepare for 
worse-than-expected declines in business activities. 
 
Finance Minister Yosano said in a press conference: "The Finance 
Ministry thinks it is possible to save more than 100 billion yen" 
reasonably. He revealed that the money would be allocated to cover 
spending on social security programs, so it will not contribute to 
improving the nation's fiscal conditions. 
 
The set of guidelines will be approved at a cabinet meeting today, 
and government agencies will present their budget requests to the 
Finance Ministry by the end of August. The Democratic Party of Japan 
(DPJ), however, intends to include in its policy manifest for the 
next general election a policy of juggling the current budget 
allocations (by the government). Should a government led by the DPJ 
be inaugurated after the general election, the ceilings for fiscal 
2010 may significantly change. 
 
A senior member of the DPJ Policy Research Council said: "The 
guidelines could be dropped." 
 
15) Government's written response: Width of territorial sea at 
straits set at 3 nautical miles "from standpoint of national 
interest" 
 
YOMIURI (Page 2) (Full) 
July 1, 2007 
 
At a cabinet meeting on June 30, the government adopted a written 
response to the question on the reason for setting the width of the 
territorial sea at five straits - Soya, Tsugaru, Osumi and the East 
and West Channels of Tsushima - at 3 nautical miles, instead of 12 
nautical miles under the Territorial Sea Law. It says: "This is from 
the standpoint of overall national interest that as a maritime state 
and an advanced industrial country, ensuring free navigation of 
commercial ships, large tankers, and other vessels at these straits, 
which are strategic locations in international transportation, is 
indispensable." This was in response to a written query from House 
of Representatives member Muneo Suzuki (New Party Daichi). Former 
Vice Foreign Minister Ryohei Murata had asserted that the width of 
the territorial sea at these straits was a political measure to 
enable U.S. vessels carrying nuclear weapons to pass through the 
straits without passing through Japanese territorial waters. 
 
16) Government says both "Nippon" and "Nihon" are fine 
 
YOMIURI (Page 2) (Full) 
July 1, 2009 
 
At a cabinet meeting on June 30, the government decided on a 
response to the question of whether the country's name should be 
 
TOKYO 00001485  013 OF 013 
 
 
pronounced "Nippon" or "Nihon." It has determined that, "Both are 
widely used, so there is no need to unify in favor of either one." 
This was in response to a written query from Democratic Party of 
Japan House of Representatives member Tetsundo Iwakuni. 
 
According to the Cabinet Office, a national language research 
committee of the pre-war Ministry of Education suggested in 1934 
that the country's name should only be pronounced as "Nippon," but 
this was never written into law. 
 
ZUMWALT