Japan: Fumio Kishida becomes prime minister, unveils cabinet

Japan's parliament votes Fumio Kishida the country's next prime minister. He easily won a vote Monday in parliament's lower house, where the LDP's ruling coalition holds a commanding majority, taking 311 votes to the 124 for opposition leader Yukio Edano.

Japan: Fumio Kishida becomes prime minister, unveils cabinet
Applause in Japan's Lower House of Parliament after Fumio Kishida was chosen as the new prime minister on Oct 4, 2021. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

 

Japan's new prime minister Fumio Kishida unveiled his government on Monday, mixing holdovers with newcomers, after lawmakers voted him the new leader of the world's third-largest economy.
The soft-spoken scion of a Hiroshima political family, 64-year-old Kishida beat popular vaccine chief Taro Kono to win the leadership of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) last week.
He easily won Monday's vote in parliament approving him as prime minister thanks to the party's commanding majority.
Kishida bowed to his fellow lawmakers after the vote, but did not immediately speak. Earlier, he told reporters he was ready for the top job.
"I think it will be a new start in its true sense," he said.
"I want to take on challenges with a strong will and firm resolve to face the future."
Kishida is widely considered a safe pair of hands, who commands support from his own faction within the LDP and is not expected to veer significantly from the government's existing policies.
His election came after former prime minister Yoshihide Suga, who submitted his resignation on Monday morning, announced he would not stand for the LDP leadership after just one year in office.
Shortly after the parliament vote, Kishida's new cabinet was announced, with more than a dozen fresh faces but holdovers from the Suga government largely populating the most important portfolios.
Both Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi and Defence Minister Nobuo Kishi will retain their jobs.
Motegi is a Harvard-educated political veteran who has taken the lead in negotiating key trade deals, while Kishi is the brother of former prime minister Shinzo Abe.