Japan Digital Minister Kono joins ruling party presidential race

Outspoken 61-year-old launches third bid to become prime minister

20240826 Taro Kono presser

Japan's Digital Minister Taro Kono speaks at a news conference on Aug. 26. (Photo by Uichiro Kasai)

TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Digital Minister Taro Kono said Monday he will run in the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's leadership election in what will be his third bid to become Japan's prime minister.

The outspoken Kono, 61, is the third person to announce a candidacy for the Sept. 27 leadership race to replace incumbent Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, whose current three-year term ends next month. Kono lost to Kishida in the election for the party's presidency in 2021.

Kono is a reform-minded ninth-term member of the House of Representatives and is often labeled a political maverick. Educated at Georgetown University in the United States, he has served as foreign and defense minister. He is fluent in English.

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In the 2021 LDP election, he was aligned with Shinjiro Koizumi and Shigeru Ishiba. Koizumi and Ishiba, who did not run in the election, are the public's preferred candidates to succeed Kishida, according to opinion polls, but the leader is chosen by LDP members and the party's sitting parliamentarians.

Former defense minister Ishiba, 67, announced his candidacy on Saturday, describing it as his "last" attempt and the culmination of his 38-year political career. The 43-year-old Koizumi, who was once the environment minister, is also expected to join what is becoming a crowded race.

The presidential election will be the first since most of the ruling party's factions decided to disband after they came under intense scrutiny following a slush fund scandal. Kishida has expressed his belief that the LDP should engage in a period of renewal.

Kono belongs to a still-existing faction led by Deputy Prime Minister Taro Aso, who has refused to dissolve it. One of the lawmakers who backed Kono's leadership bid has said he should leave the group if he runs for party president.

In other developments, industry minister Ken Saito, 65, has expressed his willingness to run and Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi, 63, the right-hand man of Kishida, is considering a bid.

Foreign Minister Yoko Kamikawa, 71, is also making preparations to declare her candidacy, indicating over the weekend that she has cleared the first hurdle to run by securing the backing of 20 LDP members.

Kishida has encouraged whoever is willing to succeed him to contest the election, including members of his Cabinet.

The election will likely see around 10 members vying for the LDP's top job and therefore to be the country's prime minister.

Former Economic Security Minister Takayuki Kobayashi, 49, was the first to announce his bid. Sanae Takaichi, 63, who took over the post from Kobayashi, is also making preparations to run.

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