Yahoo – AFP, Harumi Ozawa, July 31, 2016
Tokyo (AFP) - Veteran politician Yuriko Koike was elected Sunday as Tokyo's first woman governor, partial results showed, and immediately vowed to get a grip on the megacity's troubled 2020 Olympic preparations.
Tokyo (AFP) - Veteran politician Yuriko Koike was elected Sunday as Tokyo's first woman governor, partial results showed, and immediately vowed to get a grip on the megacity's troubled 2020 Olympic preparations.
The
64-year-old former TV anchorwoman, defence minister and environment minister
was some 700,000 votes ahead of her nearest rival with almost two thirds of
ballots counted.
Koike
claimed victory and addressed supporters in the sprawling metropolis of 13.6
million people shortly after media exit polls declared her the winner at 8 pm
(1100 GMT).
"I
will lead Tokyo politics in an unprecedented manner, a Tokyo you have never
seen," she said in a voice made mildly hoarse after two weeks of
campaigning.
The
election, contested by a record field of 21 candidates, was called after previous
governor Yoichi Masuzoe resigned over a financial scandal involving the lavish
use of public funds on hotels and spa trips -- the second successive Tokyo
leader to quit.
Koike
largely played down her achievement of becoming the capital's first woman
governor in a male-dominated society but said she will push female-friendly
policies "so that both women and men can shine in Tokyo".
A key task
will be smoothing the city's troubled road to the 2020 Olympics, hit by a
series of embarrassing scandals and soaring costs.
Koike's
four-year term will extend until just after the summer Games start and her
performance in the run-up will be closely watched.
A key
challenge will be getting a grip on swelling costs, seen as possibly double or
triple the reported original forecast of 730 billion yen ($7.14 billion).
![]() |
Yuriko
Koike is the first woman to lead Japan's capital city Tokyo as
mayor (AFP
Photo/Kazuhiro Nogi)
|
She vowed
to tackle the cost issue head on.
"I
would like to review the basis for the budget, so that I can clarify for the
eyes of Tokyo residents how much they would have to pay," Koike said, adding
that transparency would be the watchword.
"Reviewing
the Olympic and Paralympic budget will be the litmus test for it."
Kadhafi,
Arafat
Euphoria in
2013 at securing the right to host sport's marquee event has given way to
frustration over gaffes, scandals and cost overruns.
Last year
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had to tear up blueprints for a new Olympic stadium
because of ballooning costs, while organisers ditched the official logo after
the designer was accused of plagiarism. A new one was solicited.
Such
fiascoes, however, have since been overshadowed by allegations of corruption,
and French prosecutors have launched an investigation into alleged bribes
linked to Tokyo's bid. Organisers have denied wrongdoing.
Masuzoe's
predecessor Naoki Inose -- who had led the successful bid to win the Games --
bowed out after becoming embroiled in a personal financial scandal.
Despite the
high number of candidates, the Tokyo race was seen as a three-way contest
between Koike and two men -- former prefectural governor Hiroya Masuda and prominent
television journalist Shuntaro Torigoe.
Koike, long
a fixture in Japanese media and politics, speaks fluent English and Arabic.
She
graduated from Cairo University in 1976 in sociology and worked as an Arabic
interpreter before going into journalism.
In 1978,
she interviewed then-Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi and Palestine Liberation
Organisation chairman Yasser Arafat for a Japanese broadcaster.
She has
compared herself to Hillary Clinton and was once seen as having the best chance
to be Japan's first female prime minister. But she was defeated when running in
2008 for leadership of the LDP.
"Hillary
used the phrase 'glass ceiling'. It's often a sheet of steel in Japan,"
Koike once told a television talk show.
She won the
Tokyo election despite failing to obtain the party's backing. It spurned her
for failing to seek its approval before announcing her candidacy and supported
rival Masuda instead.
Other key
issues in the balloting were Tokyo's dire childcare shortage and overseeing
disaster response plans and preparations due to perennial earthquake threats to
the capital.


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