Japan’s agriculture minister stepped down Monday following questions
over political funding contributions, the latest in a series of such
resignations.
Koya Nishikawa resigned as head of the Ministry of Agriculture,
Forestry and Fisheries saying he wanted to avoid disruptions to
parliamentary proceedings.
Questions arose over an alleged 1 million yen donation to a ruling
Liberal Democratic Party chapter headed by Nishikawa from a company run
by a sugar manufacturers association that had received government
subsidies.
“No matter how much I explain the situation, if people don’t
understand they don’t understand,” Nishikawa told reporters. “There is
absolutely no conflict with the law, but people can still use this to
tarnish my image.”
Nishikawa and other government officials said earlier that he had returned the money.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters that he had resisted, but in the end accepted Nishikawa’s resignation.
“He was determined to quit, and I have to respect his wishes. I think
it’s really regrettable,” Abe said. He said he was asking lawmaker
Yoshimasa Hayashi, who preceded Nishikawa as farm minister before a
Cabinet reshuffle in September, to resume the post.
Abe praised Nishikawa for working on agricultural reforms and Japan’s
efforts toward forming a pan-Pacific trade pact, called the
Trans-Pacific Partnership. Japan’s protection of its sugar industry is
one of five sensitive areas in negotiations with the U.S. toward the
trade agreement.
Political funding scandals are a chronic problem in Japanese politics
and questions over Nishikawa’s situation surfaced last fall. Two other
ministers in the Cabinet that Abe formed in his September reshuffle quit
over funding allegations. But he kept on most of the other ministers,
including Nishikawa, in the Cabinet he announced following a general
election in December.
Opposition questioning over such issues in the parliament tends to
slow work on the body’s main priority, pushing through the annual budget
before the fiscal year starts on April 1.
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