Japan's voters go to the polls on SundayDec 16,2012 that determines the composition of the lower house of Japan's parliament (Diet), the 480-member House of Representatives, which determines who forms the government.
The upper house, the 242-member House of
Councillors, is not up for election
The Election Process
Members of the House of Representatives are elected for 4- year-terms
using a mixed electoral system, with 300 members elected by simple
majorities in single-member constituencies and the remaining 180 from National Party lists in proportion to their party's share of the vote
The Election Result Expectations
The election is likely to deliver a setback to the governing Democratic Party of
Japan(DPJ) only 3 years after it ended decades of nearly unbroken rule
by the Liberal Democratic Party(LDP)
The Incumbent Prime Minister Yoshihiko Nodaof Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) formed from various small social democratic and liberal groups in 1998,
the DPJ led by Yukio Hatoyama unites a range of political views, from centre-left to centrist,swept to power for the first time in 2009 amid voter
fatigue with more than 50 years of nearly uninterrupted government by
the LDP, winning a strong 308-seat majority
The DPJ has seen a steady decline in its popularity, experiencing two
changes of prime minister, party infighting and corruption scandals,
and acquiring a reputation with many voters for ineffectiveness.The main opposition party - the LDP - has rebounded since losing power, benefiting from disillusionment with the DPJ
Main Party Leaders and Prime Ministerial Candidates
Yoshihiko Noda became DPJ leader and PM of Japan in August 2011 after his predecessor, Naoto Kan, resigned in response to criticism of his handling of the Fukushima disaster.
Shinzo Abe,leader of LDP has chance of becoming the PM of Japan for a second time after serving in the office and as LDP leader between September 2006 and September 2007
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