35.7 C
Delhi
Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Japan’s lower house rejects no-confidence motion in gov’t

Date:

Share post:

Donate-GC-Razorpay

Tokyo: The lower house of the Japanese parliament, the House of Representatives, did not pass a no-confidence motion against the government proposed by opposition parties.

A total of 449 lawmakers participated in the vote, with 107 of them being in favor and 342 against.

On Thursday, the leader of the Constitutional Democratic Party, Kenta Izumi, said he would submit a no-confidence motion against Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s government on June 16. The opposition party reportedly opposes the creation of a special fund to secure financial resources for defense needs and criticizes the prime minister for abusing his powers over the right to dissolve the parliament.

Until recently, Japanese media had been speculating about whether Kishida would dissolve the parliament. On Thursday, Kishida said that he would not dissolve it.

The latest opinion polls conducted by Japanese media show that support for the incumbent cabinet is once again on the decline. According to NHK, it has dropped three percentage points in the past month to 43%.

Related articles

Involvement of local youth in Pahalgam terror attack exposed, three suspects identified

After the recent terrorist attack in the Baisaran Valley of the Pahalgam area of ​​​​Kashmir, the investigating agencies...

Same as Hindus saying Hey Ram, zipline operator’s ‘Allahu Akbar’ chant normal reaction, not linked to Pahalgam attack: NIA

The National Investigation Agency (NIA) has said that the zipline operator who said ‘Allahu Akbar’ during the Pahalgam...

India planning military action in next 24-36 hours, will face consequences: Pakistan

Pakistan, on Wednesday, claimed it has ‘credible intelligence’ that India is planning military action against it in the...

48 destinations closed down, 1000 houses searched, 34 raided across Kashmir

Forty-eight out of eighty-seven tourist destinations across Kashmir have been closed down by the government, while the number...