China News Service, June 15th. According to Kyodo News, Japan’s four opposition parties, the Constitutional Democracy, the Communist Party, the National Democracy, and the Social Democrats, jointly submitted a no-confidence resolution against the Yoshihide Suga cabinet to the House of Representatives on the 15th, criticizing them. Under the circumstance that the spread of the new crown epidemic has not been contained, the practice of not extending the parliamentary session and striving to host the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics is "irresponsible."

The congressional session will end on the 16th. The ruling and opposition parties are looking at the House of Representatives elections to be held by the fall, and the confrontation may become more intense.

Data map: Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga.

  According to reports, the last time the opposition party in Japan filed a no-confidence case was in June 2019 during the Abe cabinet.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga was on his visit to the UK on the 14th, Japan time. The possibility of dissolving the House of Representatives after the no-confidence case was submitted said to the media that he "will consider it after submission."

The secretary-general of the Liberal Democratic Party Tetsuro Fukuyama said that "it will be submitted after considering the dissolution of the House of Representatives."

  The Japanese opposition parties pointed out that it is necessary to extend the parliament session for three months until the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics end, but the Yoshihide Suga regime refused to extend it.

The first of the four opposition parties decided on the 14th to jointly submit a case of no confidence.

Toshihiro Nikai, secretary-general of the Liberal Democratic Party, said that if the no-confidence case is submitted, "it will be disbanded to the prime minister."

  Limin and the Communist Party also submitted to the Senate a resolution on the dismissal of Senate Cabinet Chairman Hiroshi Moriya (Liberal Democratic Party) on the grounds of trying to force a vote on the land use supervision bill.