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Japan’s Ruling LDP Wins Big in Election After Abe’s Killing

The party of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe–who was gunned down on July 8–swept to victory in parliamentary elections just two days after his killing sent shockwaves through Japan.

The conservative Liberal Democratic Party won 63 out of the remaining 125 seats. The LDP and its coalition partner, the Komeito, won 76 seats—retaining a comfortable majority in the upper house of parliament.

Continue reading: Shinzo Abe Rewrote Japan’s Place in the World. And remained a power broker until the very end

It’s a slight boost for the ruling LDP, which held 55 seats before the election, but it was hardly a mass outpouring of public support.

“The ruling LDP coalition was already going into the election in a strong position,” says Michael Green, CEO of the U.S. Studies Centre in Australia and author of Line of Advantage: Japan’s Grand Strategy in the Era of Abe Shinzo. “Prime Minister [Fumio]Kishida learned lessons from his previous mistakes in relation to the politics of COVID, and gained public support for the government. The opposition parties, meanwhile, are divided and disorganized.”

The LDP held power since 1955, when it was formed. Even before Abe’s killing, opinion polls showed the ruling bloc in the lead in the election for seats in the parliament’s less powerful upper house. An early-July Nikkei Research survey of over 60,000 respondents showed that the LDP would win approximately 60 of the remaining 125 seats. Just slightly lower than that of the previous upper-house elections, three years ago which had a mere 49% turnout.

The slightly higher voter turnout followed appeals from politicians—many of whom campaigned under tight security on Saturday in a final push to win voters—to not allow Abe’s murder impact their voting. “We must never allow violence to suppress speech during elections, which are the foundation of democracy,” Kishida said on Saturday.

Learn more Looking Back at TIME’s Coverage of Shinzo Abe: ‘I Am a Patriot.’

Abe, who served two stints as prime minister from 2006 to 2007 and from 2012 to 2020, was shot twice on Friday morning while giving a speech in the city of Nara in western Japan, while campaigning for the LDP ahead of Sunday’s legislative elections. He was perhaps still the country’s most powerful politician, even though he resigned in 2020 due to his declining health. He led the largest faction in the LDP and played an important role in setting the party’s agenda and its leadership.

Campaign posters are displayed for the Tokyo election of Japan’s upper House on July 10, 2022.

Toshifumi Kitamura—AFP /Getty Images

Still, the election—typically seen as a referendum on the incumbent government—may help Kishida consolidate his rule. Christopher Johnstone, the Japan chair at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) think tank, says that Kishida’s “immediate challenge will be addressing the economy, and inflation in particular, which polls indicated was the top issue for voters.” Kishida has promised to revitalize Japan’s economy with a “new form of Japanese capitalism.”

The vote might also pave the way for Kishida to revise the country’s pacifist constitution—a lifelong goal for Abe. The U.S.-drafted-constitution, which renounces war, was imposed on Japan after World War II.

Learn more How the World Is Reacting to Shinzo Abe’s Death

The outcome of Sunday’s vote means political forces supportive of constitutional revision retain a two-thirds majority of the upper chamber. Still, a revision to the constitution would have to pass a national referendum, in a country where Abe’s push for increased militarization has in the past led to large street protests.

Johnstone says Kishida “has an aggressive defense agenda, including increased spending and acquiring new capabilities like long-range strike [weapons]…Public opinion polls indicate support for this defense agenda. I expect it will move.”

On Sunday, Kishida stated that he will continue to work on plans for amending the constitution. The ruling coalition “will deepen parliamentary debate over the constitution further so a concrete amendment proposal can be compiled,” he said.

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To Amy Gunia, amy.gunia@time.com

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