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Japan Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama Resigns

MARI YAMAGUCHI   06/ 1/10 11:46 PM ET   AP

Yukio Hatoyama

TOKYO — Embattled Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said Wednesday he was resigning over his broken campaign promise to move a U.S. Marine base off the southern island of Okinawa.

The prime minister faced growing pressure from within his own party to resign ahead of July's upper house elections. His approval ratings had plummeted over his bungled handling of the relocation of the Marine Air Station Futenma, which reinforced his public image as an indecisive leader.

Hatoyama is the fourth Japanese prime minister to resign in four years.

Until Tuesday night, Hatoyama insisted he would stay on while intermittently holding talks with key members of his Democratic Party of Japan. But on Wednesday morning, after eight months in office, Hatoyama faced the nation to say he was stepping down.

"Since last year's elections, I tried to change politics in which the people of Japan would be the main characters," he told a news conference broadcast nationwide. But he conceded his efforts fell short.

"That's mainly because of my failings," he said.

Hatoyama, 63, cited two main reasons for his resignation: the Futenma issue, which led to the dismissal of one of his Cabinet members who could not accept his decision, and a political funding scandal. In that incident, two of his aides were convicted of falsifying political contribution reports and sentenced to suspended prison terms. Hatoyama himself did not face charges in the case, but it tainted his image.

His government came to power amid high hopes in September after his party soundly defeated the long-ruling conservatives in lower house elections.

Hatoyama had promised to forge a "more equal" relationship with the United States and to move Futenma off Okinawa, which hosts more than half the 47,000 U.S. troops in Japan under a security pact.

But last week, he said he would go along with the 2006 agreement to move the base to a northern part of the island, infuriating residents who want it off Okinawa entirely.

Hatoyama said Wednesday that recent tensions in the Korean peninsula surrounding the sinking of a South Korean warship reminded him of the potential instability in Northeast Asia and drove home the importance of the U.S.-Japan security pact.

"There was no choice but to keep the base on Okinawa," he said.

His three-way coalition was cut to two members over the weekend when a junior partner, the Social Democrats, withdrew after the prime minister expelled its leader Mizuho Fukushima, who rejected the Futenma decision, from the Cabinet.

"I need to take responsibility for forcing the Social Democrats to withdraw from the coalition," Hatoyama said.

Fukushima's dismissal enhanced her public standing as a politician who stood up for her convictions and reinforced perceptions of Hatoyama's wishy-washiness.

Hatoyama urged DPJ's powerful veteran and secretary general Ichiro Ozawa, who faces a separate political fundraising scandal, to step down as well, to achieve "a fresh and clean DPJ."

The Democratic Party of Japan and a remaining coalition partner still hold a majority in both houses of the Diet, or parliament – though just barely in the less powerful upper house.

After his flip-flop on the base issue, some of his own party members began to see him as a liability in July's elections and urged him to step down.

Japan's largest newspaper, the Yomiuri, citing its own survey, said Tuesday nine out of 43 upper house lawmakers from Hatoyama's party seeking re-election in July said his resignation ahead of the poll was unavoidable, while 13 others urged him to make his own decision.

Hatoyama's party, voted in last year on promises to make politics more transparent and to rein in the power of the powerful bureaucrats, won public praise for its attempts to cut back on huge public works projects, a major plank of the previous Liberal Democratic Party, which ruled Japan for most of the previous 50 years.

But they were also criticized for being slow to implement other campaign promises, such as making expressways toll-free.

Hatoyama, the grandson of a prime minister who earned a Ph.D in engineering at Stanford University, was sometimes viewed as aloof and eccentric by the Japanese public, earning him the nickname "alien."

Such perceptions increased after investigators found that Hatoyama had received 15 million yen ($170,000) a month from his mother to support his political activities – although he said had no knowledge of the contributions until the prosecutors' investigation.

Analysts have speculated that Finance Minister Naoto Kan might succeed Hatoyama. Kan gained prominence for exposing a 1996 government cover-up of HIV-tainted blood products that caused thousands of hemophilia patients to contract the virus that causes AIDS.

Public broadcaster NHK said the DPJ would elect Hatoyama's successor on Friday. Party officials did not immediately return phone calls.

___

Associated Press Writer Shino Yuasa contributed to this report.

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TOKYO — Embattled Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said Wednesday he was resigning over his broken campaign promise to move a U.S. Marine base off the southern island of Okinawa. The prim...
TOKYO — Embattled Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said Wednesday he was resigning over his broken campaign promise to move a U.S. Marine base off the southern island of Okinawa. The prim...
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11:42 PM on 06/02/2010
They started a war which they eventually lost. In Roman times this would have meant the entire destruction of their ethnic culture, history, religions, and traditions. Perhaps there is an argument that the same should be true today. It might lead to a little more talk before taking up arms.
10:28 AM on 06/03/2010
Yeah, you never hear of those Greeks today.
12:32 PM on 06/02/2010
I remember reading stories of servicemen treating the locals with great disrespect, even raping and killing young girls and some getting very weak sentances, this has been going on for quite awhile. I think the Commmander needs to be held to account for letting an anti Okinawan attitude prevail on base. Other bases around the world don't have as many problems as this base and if they do they deal with it instead of letting servicemen get away with it, and enraging the locals.
12:18 PM on 06/02/2010
I really have to laugh at the US servicemen sitting here acting like Okinawa 'needs' the US base there to thrive economically. All of the economic activity you mentioned is subterfuge of what a productive economy wants to be – one that creates goods and services for its own people and develop potential trade industries. NOT one that does little more than service layabout transient soldiers with a god complex and a vengeance. Give us a break. Nobody on earth needs a defense base to defend them from Japan, North Korean, or anyone else in the region. What they need are defense bases against the US – the most dangerous and war mongering nation in the modern world.
11:49 AM on 06/02/2010
Okay, finally I see how the pressure against Toyota played out as part of a plan to drop Japan's newly elected socialist government. Funny how the cars aren't running away with people any more, isn't it? It was all about keeping our military on their soil.
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11:54 AM on 06/02/2010
dangerous to make promises one can't keep, they have a way coming home to haunt us.
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LINY01
Kind Thoughts lead to Kind Words
11:35 AM on 06/02/2010
Hmmm....

Motive for the sinking of the South Korean ship?

Hatoyama said Wednesday that recent tensions in the Korean peninsula surrounding the sinking of a South Korean warship reminded him of the potential instability in Northeast Asia and drove home the importance of the U.S.-Japan security pact.

"There was no choice but to keep the base on Okinawa," he said.
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Hard2kill
11:26 AM on 06/02/2010
The fate of US base is now on the hands of incoming PM...
11:19 AM on 06/02/2010
An interesting perspective I came across: http://www.cafedelapensee.com/?q=content/japans-pm-resigns.

Too bad, this guy was somewhat progress, at least he gave visibility to his wife, unlike other PMs
11:31 AM on 06/02/2010
That is change, but I don't think it's progress.

This wife is after all a private person, and should be able to decide, if she is going to appear in public.

But that's just my opinion ; )
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KrisLK
Navy Vet; Archaeologist; Democrat; Mother
11:13 AM on 06/02/2010
While on active duty 1980-86, I was stationed on Okinawa from 1980-83. The argument about MCAB Futenma was going on back then with demonstrations periodically at the gates of MCB Butler (where I was stationed, USN), and MCAB Funtenma. The location of Futenma when first established was surronded by coastal wetlands. The urban sprawl that exist now was not there orginally. The Okinawans encroached on the base slowly and mainly due to the economic benifits of serving miltary personnel....bars, tatoo parlors, cheap gift shops, etc. In short, all the retail and sex shops grow up outside many military bases. Over the years, the population grew, residences were built in and among the retail shops and tightly encircled the base. This problem existed when I was stationed there in the 80s and is worse now. With the geopolitical problems today, the reality is that Futenma is needed, and I suspect it is a major economic base for the urban sprawl residence who now complain. Not to be unfeeling, but the Okinawans should of thought about the "noise" from MCAB Futenma when they moved closer, built their shops to prosper from our military personnel before hand.
11:42 AM on 06/02/2010
Futenma is needed by whom and for what?

Okinawans have inhabited that island for millenia, the US base since WWII, manned by transient US service men and women not one of whom can be prosecuted by Okinawans for any of the serious crimes that have been perpetrated against Okinawan citizens. You make it sound like we have some God-given right to be there and the native Okinawans are the intruders.

WWII has been over for 65 years. Close the base, return the troops to the US, save billions in the process.
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TXfemmom
Grandma with eye on the future
11:09 AM on 06/02/2010
Well, his resignation is a sad event. However, Obama was just following an agreement which had already been inked by a previous Japanese administration.

I would move the troops, but charge the Japanese TEN TIMES the cost of the move. Move the troops to Guam and Hawaii, or even the West Coast, and if Japan is threatened by NK or China, we'll get there when we can get there, folks. The Okinawans have always created a stink about everything. They need to remember that they were the war criminals during WWII, and that they were beaten and deserved to be beaten. My grandfather was in the Phillipines during the war and described to my male cousins, who shared it with me, exactly what the Japanese were like. They were monsters. They would chop off heads and LAUGH. They created situations for the local populations which were monstrous and starved our troops and let them die from lack of medical care. They did this throughout the Pacific, Korea and China.

The U. S. fed and protected them once the war was over and continue to protect them. Had they won, I rather doubt that they would have acted in a humane manner.

Move the troops, and if the Japanese are threatened, we'll be there when we can get there.
11:14 AM on 06/02/2010
"The Okinawans were the war criminals" ???

I never heard that claim before.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KrisLK
Navy Vet; Archaeologist; Democrat; Mother
11:27 AM on 06/02/2010
Excuse me, the OKINAWANS WERE NOT OUR ENEMIES. The Japanese occupied Okinawa, terrified the Okinawans into believing that the Americans would rape their women and children...hence many committed suicide by jumping off cliffs. The Okinawans never have been and still don't consider themselves Japanese...they are a completely different culture and socieity and historically have shown a Chinese influence. Since WWII we Americans held Okinawa till 1972, then GAVE Okinawa to Japan to govern. But no one asked the Okinawans if they wanted to be handed over to the Japanese. The island of Okinawa is part of the Ryukyu Islands south of the 5 major Japanese islands. The Ryūkyū "Kingdom" had a tributary relationship with the Chinese Empire beginning in the 15th century.
11:33 AM on 06/02/2010
Excellent post!
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7thcavman
11:01 AM on 06/02/2010
Here is another take on the Base issue. The U.S. is not in Japan to protect that country from the Chinese, North Koreans, or anyone else in Asia. The U.S. is there to protect the Chinese, the Koreans, and the rest of the Pacific from the Japanese. If we really want to make the Chinese and North Koreans squirm, all we have to do is withdraw from the Occupation and let the Japanese control their own defense decisions.
10:55 AM on 06/02/2010
Didn't his parents ever warn him about "toxic" friends?
10:49 AM on 06/02/2010
Please free Okinawa!
over 60 years of US occupation, enough is enough!
10:23 AM on 06/02/2010
Question: Where are the WOMEN in Japanese politics? Are they still stuck in 17th century politics in Japan? I've yet to see a woman rise up to executive level in their politics as well as business milieu. Isn't that shameful in the 21st century?
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jesuswazasocialist
10:08 AM on 06/02/2010
Hopefully the next guy will have better dress sense.
09:44 AM on 06/02/2010
The US should make the magnamous gesture of stating unequivocally that the base on okinawa is closing in 3 years. We have way too many foreign bases and we certainly shouldn't have bases where we are clearly not wanted. It makes no economic, diplomatic or military sense. If Japan feels the need for a base on Okinawa, let them man it.