TOKYO - Three ruling party rivals formally launched campaigns on Friday to 
become Japan's next prime minister, registering to run in a race hawkish cabinet 
minister Shinzo Abe appears to have already wrapped up. 
 
 
 |  Japanese Chief Cabinet 
 Secretary Shinzo Abe speaks to members of the ruling Liberal Democratic 
 Party who support him as a candidate in the upcoming election to become 
 the next Japanese prime minister, at the party headquarters in Tokyo 
 September 8, 2006. [Reuters]
 | 
The 51-year-old Abe advocates a bolder role for Japan on the world stage and 
reviving traditional values at home. But some doubt he will be as forceful as 
combative Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi in pushing economic reforms. 
"I want to focus on what needs to be done to have Japan's economy grow 
steadily, and on reviving education," Abe told reporters before submitting his 
candidacy for the September 20 Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) presidential 
election. 
"From the standpoint of emerging from the 'post-war regime', I want to show 
leadership on a new constitution," he said. 
Abe, who would become Japan's first prime minister to be born after World War 
Two, has made revising Japan's pacifist constitution a linchpin of his platform. 
The constitution was drafted by U.S. occupation authorities after Japan's 
1945 defeat. 
"I want to develop an assertive diplomacy," he added. 
Two lagging challengers, Foreign Minister Taro Aso, 66, and Finance Minister 
Sadakazu Tanigaki, 61, also registered their candidacies, despite overwhelming 
odds against them. 
The new LDP president is assured the premiership by virtue of the party's 
grip on parliament, which is expected to convene on September 26 to choose the 
new prime minister. 
Koizumi is stepping down after more than five years in the top job, making 
him Japan's third-longest ruling prime minister since the end of World War Two. 
BIG LEAD 
Some 70 percent of LDP lawmakers have jumped on Abe's bandwagon and he is 
running well ahead among the party rank-and-file as well, media surveys say. 
The well-dressed, softly spoken Abe - known for his tough stance on the 
emotive issue of Japanese abducted by North Korea decades ago - also has a big 
lead in surveys asking the broader public who they prefer as next prime 
minister. 
The party is counting on the popularity of Abe, now chief cabinet secretary, 
to help them in an upper house election next summer. 
Although the race looked over before it began, the LDP hopes to profit from 
the performance by keeping public interest alive. 
"It would mean the end of the LDP if the curtain went up on September 8 and 
the people found out that the play was actually already over," Aso told 
reporters recently. 
BEAUTIFUL CAMPAIGN 
Abe, who is running under the slogan "Beautiful Country, Japan", has said one 
of his top priorities will be to revise Japan's education law to put patriotism 
in school curriculums. 
He has also said he wants better ties with China and South Korea, chilled by 
Koizumi's annual visits to Tokyo's Yasukuni Shrine, seen by critics as a symbol 
of Japan's past militarism. 
The Yomiuri newspaper reported on Friday that Abe was eyeing talks with 
Chinese President Hu Jintao on the sidelines of an Asia-Pacific leaders summit 
in Hanoi in November. 
But Abe has been coy on two topics of keen public interest: whether he would 
visit Yasukuni if elected, and when and how much he thinks Japan's 5 percent 
sales tax should be raised. 
Tanigaki says he won't visit Yasukuni and that Japan should raise the sales 
tax to 10 percent in by 2015 to rein in Japan's huge public 
debt.