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Japanese Consulate San Francisco Vice Consul Charged with Assualt and 14 Counts of Domestic Violence

May 9, 2012 – 5:58 am |

An interesting turn of events that should test the diplomatic will of Japan and the  application of domestic and international law. The LA TImes reports:
“A Japanese consulate official faces felony charges after San Mateo County …

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Home » Government, Politics & Security

Japan’s Leadership Deficit

Submitted by on March 21, 2009 – 8:32 am2 Comments

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Observing Japan’s Tobias Harris, doctoral candidate in political science at MIT, has written a great piece for the Far Eastern Economic Review on the lack of Japan’s leadership. Harris is the author of Observing Japan (www.observingjapan.com), a blog on Japanese politics. It’s a great read, so check be sure to check it out!

The travails of Taro Aso and, more recently, Ichiro Ozawa, combined with the ascendance of Barack Obama in the United States have left many Japanese with leadership envy.

Prime Minister Aso himself may have a mild case of it: Following the recent passage of the Obama administration’s stimulus bill, Mr. Aso admired the speed with which the new U.S. administration acted and lamented that he was unable to do the same. Similarly, in his 2006 book “Ozawaism,” Mr. Ozawa wrote of Japan as a “country without leaders” and detailed his efforts to train future leaders in his annual workshop. Messrs. Aso and Ozawa are joined by politicians and journalists from across the political spectrum who bemoan the country’s ability to produce inspiring leaders, leaders like Mr. Obama capable of inspiring people far beyond their nation’s borders instead of serving as the butt of jokes at home and abroad. The foreign press has echoed domestic Japanese sentiment. As Christian Caryl recently asked in Newsweek, why are Japan’s politicians so bad?

  • http://www.blackexpat.com Lord Phat

    This is a global problem I think but to a certain extent it is focusing on Asia…if you look at voter participation in almost all democracies, excluding countries with mandatory participation laws and the US last election, rates are really down.

    But in Asia, Japan probably has it extra bad but Japan has always been the “first” and standard barrier for many things in Asia like economic development. Look at South Korea, Lee Myung-Bak’s approval rating is way below 50%. He promised 7% annual growth and change like he did as Mayor of Seoul and now is falling from his pedestal. And he came in as the Korean people were tired of the previous Kim Dae-jung and Roh Moo-Hyun stuff.

    Taiwan’s KMT champion Ma Ying-jeo is in the same kind of problem, compounded by economic woes and fears he is too friendly with China. In “stable and prosperous” Singapore the long ruling PAP is scared of losing power being savaged as out of touch and even corrupt. Thailand has had how many governments in the last few years? UMNO is falling in Malaysia?

    China isn’t a democracy so you don’t see the sort of vocal criticism but when you invite ever county level police chief to Beijing for training on handling “social unrest” like they did last month, that sends a bit of a message doesn’t it?

    I have no grand theories. The closest thing I can think is that a lot of the current government and party setups in Asia are geared towards creating economic growth and opportunity–and have worked will to do this. But once you develop like Japan, Korea, Singapore, or Taiwan, what next? When the bargain of economic advancement for political complacency falls apart, what then?

  • http://ourmaninabiko.blogspot.com/ Our Man in Abiko

    The system that worked for the post war world (vote for me, I’ll keep you in sake and noodles and give you a pension to boot) is broken. The current pols are products of that system, the new leadership model has yet to emerge, but think it will be a similar shift that we’ve seen from the analogue world to the digital. Anyway, no country has a monopoly on inept leadership.

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