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Posted by BM. on Wednesday, June 02, 2010

Yukio Hatoyama, who took office in September, has seen his poll ratings plummet from more than 70 per cent to below 20 per cent amid a row over an unpopular US army base on the southern island of Okinawa.

Hatoyama initially promised to move the base off the island but backtracked and decided to keep it there, caving in to Washington but enraging Okinawans and his pacifist coalition partners the Social Democrats.The left-leaning group quit his three-party coalition on Sunday, weakening the government in the upper house ahead of July elections, while Hatoyama's poll ratings plunged to a new low of below 20 per cent.
A tearful Hatoyama made the announcement at a special parliamentary meeting of MPs from his Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), telling them: "I will step down" while also vowing to "create a new DPJ"."The government's work has not reflected the public's wishes," the prime minister said, adding that he had also asked party heavyweight and secretary general Ichiro Ozawa to quit.Ozawa has been embroiled in a funding scandal that has seen three of his current and former aides indicted.Prosecutors have also in the past questioned Ozawa and raided his offices.
Hatoyama, 63, named Ozawa's and his own funds problems and the Okinawa issue as the two main reasons for his resignation.He became embroiled in a funding scandal over large donations made by his millionaire mother into his electoral warchest, a scandal in which a close aide received a suspended jail term."I have caused trouble for the people of Okinawa," Hatoyama said, referring to the base issue."We will need to make efforts to move the US base outside of Okinawa. But the result was that we could not deliver."
Speculation that Hatoyama would quit had dominated newspapers this week, and calls for him to resign as leader of the world's second largest economy have grown within the DPJ ahead of upper house elections expected on July 11.Hatoyama met on Tuesday with Ozawa, the chief election strategist often dubbed the "Shadow Shogun" and the power behind the premier's throne, and his party's upper house caucus leader Azuma Koshiishi.Hatoyama, who last year ended more than half a century of almost unbroken conservative rule, was Japan's fourth prime minister in four years.
Tipped as the most likely successors was Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Naoto Kan, with Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada and Transport Minister Seiji Maehara also seen as possible contenders.A Stanford-trained engineering scholar, Hatoyama has a scholarly bent that often saw him criticised as lofty and out of touch with the common people.Hatoyama hails from one of Japan's most powerful political and business clans, a family sometimes dubbed "Japan's Kennedys".


U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton talks with Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama at the latter's office and official residence on May 21, 2010 in Tokyo, Japan. Clinton kicked off an Asia tour in Japan where both sides have condemned North Korea after investigators blam U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton talks with Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama at the latter's office and official residence on May 21, 2010 in Tokyo, Japan. Clinton kicked off an Asia tour in Japan where both sides have condemned North Korea after investigators blamed it for sinking a South Korean warship.

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