China News Service, September 28. According to Kyodo News, Japan’s Liberal Democratic Party’s presidential election will be voted on the afternoon of the 29th to elect the 27th president to succeed Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga. The election has entered the final sprint.

Kyodo News analysis pointed out that of the four candidates, Kono Taro may have the first but less than half of the votes, and Kono and Kishida Fumio may pass the final vote to compete for the president of the Liberal Democratic Party.

The data picture is Kono Taro.

  According to the report, four candidates participated in the competition this time, namely Taro Kono, minister in charge of regulatory reform, Fumio Kishida, former head of the Liberal Democratic Party's government affairs investigation, former Minister of General Affairs Sanae Takaichi, and Liberal Democratic Party Secretary-General Acting Noda Seiko.

  The results of the Kyodo News Agency’s survey of support for members of Congress combined with the votes of party members and party members. It is very likely that Taro Kono, the minister in charge of administrative reform, won the first but less than half of the votes, and the second-ranked former government affairs. Fumio Kishida, the chairman of the investigation committee, launched the final vote.

Then came Sanae Takaichi, the former Minister of General Affairs, and Seiko Nagada, the acting secretary, failed to increase the number of votes.

The final vote may be determined by the votes of members.

  The survey on the support trends of members of the Diet was confirmed by interviews with members or people close to them as of the 27th.

In terms of votes for members, Kishida may be roughly locked at around 135 votes, leading the candidates.

Kono may have more than 100 votes, Gaoshi has between 95 and 99 votes, and Noda has more than 20 votes.

About 20 people have not yet decided or answered.

  After the survey on the support trends of party members and party members conducted on the 25th and 26th was converted into the number of votes and the members' votes, Kono had more than 300 votes, Kishida had more than 230 votes, Gaoshi had between 165 and 169 votes, and Noda had 35 votes. Around the ticket.

No candidate received more than 383 votes out of the total of 764 votes, and it is more likely that Kono and Kishida will vote in the final vote.

  The final vote is one member of the Diet and one vote for each of the 47 prefectural branch associations. Therefore, the movement of the votes of the members will have a greater impact on the outcome.

  The final vote was held in the 2012 presidential election in which five candidates competed. Former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who won the votes of members of various factions, reversed the former Secretary General Ishibashige, who was at the top of the first round of voting, and won.

  The old Takeshita faction (51 people) held an emergency meeting on the 27th to discuss how to deal with the situation of ushering in the final vote.

Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi, who serves as the acting chairman, said, “The current situation is that the stability of the regime is considered, and there are many voices supporting Kishida in the faction.”

  The head of the tax investigation committee who is serving as the leader of the Kishida camp’s election countermeasures, Li Ming, and Abe, who supports Takaichi, held talks in the Diet.

According to analysis, it may be that Abe asked Wakagida to enter the final vote to support it.