Tokyo - A newspaper poll published Sunday showed most Japanese voters 
want Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe, a conservative, to be the country's 
next leader, a day after he was endorsed by current Prime Minister Junichiro 
Koizumi. 
 
 
 |  Japanese 
 Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe (C), flanked by Finance Minister 
 Sadakazu Tanigaki (L) and Foreign Minister Taro Aso, delivers a stump 
 speech in front of a crowd at Tokyo's Akihabara district September 9, 
 2006. [Reuters]
 | 
Abe and two other contenders, Finance Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki and Foreign 
Minister Taro Aso, are vying for the top post in the governing Liberal 
Democratic Party in September 20 balloting. Koizumi's term expires later this 
month. 
The LDP leader is almost certain to become Japan's next prime minister 
because of the party's strong majority in Parliament. 
On Sunday, the three candidates traveled separately outside Tokyo to appeal 
to local supporters. 
Koizumi broke his silence late Saturday on his endorsement. "I will cast my 
vote for Mr. Abe," he said in Helsinki, Finland, where he is attending an 
Asia-Europe Meeting. "Since I became prime minister, Mr. Abe ... has been the 
closest to me and helped me move ahead with reforms." 
Abe "has done a superb job and earned recognition as a future leader," 
Koizumi said. 
Public opinion polls have also put Abe far ahead of the other two candidates. 
In a survey published by the national Asahi newspaper on Sunday, 54 percent 
of respondents picked the 51-year-old Abe as most suited to be the next prime 
minister, while Tanigaki and Aso were chosen by only about 10 percent each. The 
remaining respondents were undecided. 
The respondents overwhelmingly cited "personality and image" and 
"youthfulness" as reasons for picking Abe, while only a fraction took note of 
his policies, the survey said. Only 11 percent of respondents said they knew 
Abe's political agenda. 
Abe's popularity depends heavily on his good looks and gentle image, 
especially among women, said the Asahi, which interviewed 1,055 voters in the 
September 8-9 telephone survey. 
"The LDP leadership race lacks excitement," the newspaper said. "It's not 
just because the outcome is predictable, but because candidates lack personal 
charm and their debates are boring." 
The LDP leader will be elected by party politicians and members, not by the 
general public. 
During a policy debate on Saturday, Abe said Japan's economy will benefit if 
the country more aggressively promotes free trade across Asia. 
Abe renewed his calls for Japan to build a stronger military and push ahead 
with economic reforms. He also reiterated his intention to revise Japan's 
US-drafted 1947 pacifist Constitution, which renounces the use of force in 
settling international disputes. 
Abe said he would seek to improve relations with Japan's Asian neighbors, and 
pledged to preserve Japan's alliance with the United States. 
Tanigaki, 61, who has criticized Koizumi's Asian diplomacy and his visits to 
a controversial war shrine, is presenting himself as the candidate with economic 
credentials who can mend Japan's foreign relations. 
Aso, oldest among the three at 65, is stressing his experience and has 
focused on economic reform and on maintaining Japan's defense alliance with 
Washington.