Agbriefings May 2019

Page 16

NORTH ASIA 16

JAPAN

Local elections favourable for Japan’s IR development If at the beginning of this year one were to sketch out the dream scenario for IR development in Japan, the actual results of April’s Unified Local Elections would greatly resemble that picture, with pro-IR politicians and parties winning almost every battle, and usually winning big.

T

he stakes were arguably the highest in Osaka, the one major urban market where the local government has been moving forward proactively with an IR bid, together with its added bonus of landing the 2025 World Expo for the Yumeshima site. The local ruling party—the Osaka Restoration Association—put it all on the line in the April 7 elections. Not only were the regularly scheduled prefectural assembly and city council elections held on that day, but also the gubernatorial and mayoral elections that had been scheduled for this November. Governor Ichiro Matsui and Mayor Hirofumi

Asia Gaming Briefings | May 2019

Yoshimura resigned their posts seven months early and then ran for one another’s offices. The gamble paid off handsomely for the Osaka leaders. Not only were Yoshimura and Matsui returned as governor and mayor respectively, but their regional party performed fantastically, winning an outright majority in the prefectural assembly and gaining a substantial number of seats in the city council. This election had not been fought on the issue of the Yumeshima IR, but its outcome guaranteed fast-track development of the project led by a local government that is entirely committed to it. In Hokkaido, the outcome of the elections was similar. While new Governor Naomichi

Suzuki has not overtly supported an IR bid for his northernmost prefecture, he decisively defeated an anti-casino candidate supported by all the opposition parties and who would have certainly brought the hammer down on local IR schemes. In the Hokkaido Prefectural Assembly, too, the ruling conservatives gained a single-party majority for the first time in 36 years. In short, pushed by the prefecture’s business community and the city government of Tomakomai, the stage is clearly set for the new governor to announce that he will support an IR bid. This picture was pretty much the same everywhere else. The pro-IR mayor of Sasebo, Norio Tomonaga, was handily reelected, and


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