Explainer-How will Japan's ruling party pick the next prime minister?

Published 09/26/2024, 12:28 AM
Updated 09/26/2024, 12:30 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida arrives at Seoul Air base in Seongnam, South Korea, September 6, 2024. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo

TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party will elect its new president on Friday to replace outgoing Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and lead a party that has governed the country for most of the past seven decades.   

HOW DOES THE VOTE WORK?

Two weeks of debates and campaign events across Japan culminate in a gathering on Friday of the nine candidates and other LDP lawmakers at party headquarters in Tokyo for the vote to decide the new leader.

Since the party has a majority in parliament, the winner will become the next prime minister.

LDP lawmakers will cast 368 votes in the first round, with an equal number distributed among rank-and-file members gathered on Thursday.

In the 2021 leadership election, the party had 1.13 million registered members, its website showed.

A candidate securing a simple majority in that poll becomes party leader. If no one secures a majority, a run-off poll follows, between the two candidates with the most votes. 

In the second round, each lawmaker again gets one vote, but the share of the rank-and-file drops to 47 votes, one for each of Japan's prefectures.

In the unlikely event of a tie, the winner will be decided by lot. That has never happened in a leadership contest, but was used in 2010 to decide who would chair the LDP's upper house caucus.  

AFTER THE PARTY VOTE

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida arrives at Seoul Air base in Seongnam, South Korea, September 6, 2024. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo

Kishida and his ministers will resign, probably on Monday, and parliament will gather to name the new party leader as his successor, who will then announce a new cabinet and appoint key LDP officials.

The new prime minister may also call a snap general election to seek a national mandate, with at least one leading candidate, Shinjiro Koizumi, having promised to do so. Such elections could come as early as October 27, media have said.

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