Chinanews, September 9th, a comprehensive report, on September 8, the Liberal Democratic Party, the ruling party in Japan, issued a presidential election announcement, and all candidates officially launched a canvassing campaign.

The election vote is scheduled to be held on the 14th, and the result will also determine the successor to the Japanese Prime Minister.

Former Secretary General Ishibashige, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga, and Director Fumio Kishida, who participated in the election, attended a lecture and a joint press conference at the party headquarters that day to express the regime's vision.

  It is expected that the focus of the election campaign will include the extent to which the policies of the Abe regime will continue for seven years and eight months, how to rejuvenate the economy based on the prevention and control of the new crown epidemic, and how to revitalize the local economy.

  Ishiba advocates social change as a "big reset", Yoshihide Suga advocates inheriting "Abenomics", saying "I will inherit the economic policies of the Abe government", and Kishida advocates rebuilding a growth strategy that is in line with the digital age.

For the presidential election on the 14th, the three candidates launched a debate.

  The three people have different views on the revision of the Constitution that Abe failed to achieve.

Shi Po said that he "will return" to the 2012 draft of the party's constitutional amendment, and emphasized that in order to resolve the issue of the "combined district" of the Senate election and the positioning of the Self-Defense Force, "the constitutional amendment will be carried out as soon as possible."

  Yoshihide Suga stated that, based on the four items of the party's constitutional amendment plan compiled in 2018, "the discussion should be carried out beyond the framework of the ruling and opposition parties at the constitution review meeting."

Kishida also mentioned the four constitutional amendments, saying that "increasing opportunities for people to think is the kingly way."