Ready to decode how Japan picks its next top leader? Hereās the lowdown on the LDPās presidential race and the parliamentary showdown! š³ļøšÆšµ
1. Party Leadership Race
The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) starts by choosing a new party president to replace outgoing PM Shigeru Ishiba. Candidates need at least 20 nominations from LDP lawmakers to get on the ballot. Then comes the debate tourāfrom Tokyo to Osakaāwhere hopefuls rally support before the big vote mix of lawmaker ballots and rank-and-file member votes.
2. The Vote Breakdown
In round one, each LDP lawmaker has one vote, and the party members share an equal block of votes. A simple majority wins. If nobody crosses the line, a run-off between the top two kicks in. Lawmakers still vote, but membersā votes slim down to 47āone per prefecture. In a super-rare tie, itās decided by lot (think official coin flip!).
3. Parliamentās Turn
Next up, both houses of parliament vote for prime minister. The lower house goes first, nominating any chamber member for the job. A majority in round one seals it, or else thereās a run-off. The upper house then follows, though only lower house members can become PM. If the two houses disagree, the lower house decision winsāso thatās where the power lies.
Bonus move: the new PM might call a snap general election to get a fresh mandate. Stay tunedāJapanās political scene is about to get interesting! š
Reference(s):
cgtn.com