Off the wire
Lost baggage means Spanish pole vaulter misses the plane to Rio  • 2nd LD-Writethru-China Focus: China issues white paper on settling disputes with the Philippines  • Top news items of South African major news outlets  • China Focus: China backs development of volunteer service organizations  • Urgent: Chinese premier arrives in Mongolia for official visit, Asia-Europe summit  • Solar-powered aircraft lands in Cairo after Pyramids flyover  • Interview: China is right to reject international court's South China Sea decision: Malagasy experts  • 1st LD: China's June exports up 1.3 pct, imports down 2.3 pct  • Cambodian scholar warns of regional tensions after ill-founded award on South China Sea arbitration  • 1st LD-Writethru: Chinese shares close higher Wednesday  
You are here:   Home

Japan's ruling LDP to regain upper house majority

Xinhua, July 13, 2016 Adjust font size:

Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party will regain majority in the upper house of the parliament for the first time in 27 years, after an independent lawmaker submitted the application to join the party, the party said Wednesday.

Tatsuo Hirano, a lawmaker who had been reconstruction minister in 2012 under the government led by the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), left the DPJ in 2013 and became an independent. In Sunday's upper house election, he gave his support to a LDP candidate.

Hirano submitted an application to join the LDP after being invited by LDP Secretary General Sadakazu Tanigaki on Tuesday, according to local media.

Hirano's switch to the LDP would bring the seats of the ruling party in the 242-member upper house to 122, which will give Prime Minister Shinzo Abe more power to push for his political agenda.

Abe's ruling LDP and other forces in favor of revising Japan's pacifist Constitution won a two-thirds majority in Sunday's upper house election, bringing the prime minister's goal of constitutional revision closer to fruition. Endit