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New rules may extend Abe premiership

By Agence France-presse | China Daily | Updated: 2017-03-06 07:59

TOKYO - Japan's ruling party on Sunday extended term limits for its leaders, a change that gives Prime Minister Shinzo Abe a shot at becoming Japan's longest-serving post-war leader.

Abe would have had to step down as party leader and prime minister in September next year, even if his Liberal Democratic Party were still in power.

The LDP congress approved extending the limit to three consecutive three-year terms, up from the previous two consecutive three-year term limit.

This means Abe can stand for re-election in the next party leadership vote sometime next year and if he wins and wins national polls - lower house elections are due before December next year - remain in power until September 2021.

Abe, 62, served as prime minister for about a year before stepping down following a historic defeat in upper house elections in 2007.

He became prime minister again when the LDP returned to power in December 2012 after a three-year period in opposition.

He then launched his "Abenomics" growth plan - a mix of massive monetary easing, government spending and red-tape slashing, but five years on growth remains fragile and inflation well below the target of 2 percent.

"We will achieve the great goal of 600 trillion yen ($5.3 trillion) GDP... keeping a virtual cycle of growth and redistribution of wealth," he said in a speech to the congress.

The LDP also adopted a policy principle of "taking a practical step towards proposing amendments to the constitution."

The decisions at the annual convention come as Abe's right-leaning LDP enjoys a comfortable majority in the both chambers of parliament.

Abe has no powerful rivals within the party vying to be the next party leader, and the country's opposition parties are currently in weak positions.

Under Abe, Japan in 2015 passed a new law that allows its Self-Defense Forces go into battle to protect allies in so-called collective self-defense.

Critics argue that this could drag Japan into distant foreign wars even if there was no direct threat to the country or its people, with some saying the rules violate the pacifist constitution.

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