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Japan's Reform Party withdraws from negotiations to elect prime minister in the opposition camp

On October 17, Japan's main opposition party, the Japan Conservative Party, announced that it would cease consultations with two other opposition parties to cooperate on the election of the prime minister, while continuing negotiations with the ruling Liberal Democratic Party on alliance.

When announcing this decision at the press conference, Fujita Wenwu, the leader of the Japan Reform Association, said that it was "very difficult" to cooperate with the Constitutional Democratic Party and the National Democratic Party.

At the same time, he said that the negotiations between the Japanese Conservative Society and the self-government party alliance "have made considerable progress", and the two sides will make "final arrangements" on cooperation.

Fujida and the new president of the self-government party, High City Morning Shima, and the two parties' senior leaders negotiated on the alliance on the 17th.

Yoshimura Yoshimura, the leader of the Japan Reform Association, has said that the party hopes to reduce the number of parliamentary seats by 10% during the provisional parliament starting on the 21st. The Liberal Democratic Party must agree to cooperate with the Japan Reform Party in this regard before the two sides can form an alliance. The Daily News quoted sources as saying on the 17th that the Liberal Democratic Party intends to accept this condition, and the two sides will discuss the details, hoping to reach an agreement before the 20th.

The long-standing ruling partner of the Self-Democratic Party, the Communist Party, announced on the 10th that it will no longer be allied with the Self-Democratic Party, shadowing the prospect of the self-democratic party's new president, High City Morning Sun, to be elected prime minister.

On the 17th, the Liberal Democratic Party and the Constitutional Democratic Party, the largest opposition party, agreed to hold a provisional parliament from October 21st to December 17th, in which the prime minister's nomination election will be held on October 21st.

The Japanese Prime Minister's nomination election is held in the House of Representatives and the Senate of the National Assembly, and those who get more than half of the votes in the first round of voting can be elected; If no one gets more than half of the votes, the top two votes will enter the second round of voting, and the one with more votes will win. (Hui Xiaoshuang)



News raw data sources → https://world.huanqiu.com/article/4Om6dAT3taJ

17WorldNews[2025.10.18-13:37] 访问:38
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