China News Service, November 12th. As Fumio Kishida was elected as the 101st Prime Minister of Japan, the second Kishida cabinet has been launched.

According to Kyodo News, according to a telephone survey, the approval rate of the Kishida cabinet was 60.5%, an increase of 2.4 percentage points from the survey conducted in early November.

On November 10, 2021 local time, Fumio Kishida became the 101st Prime Minister of Japan.

The picture shows Fumio Kishida and cabinet members taking photos at Guanting, the prime minister's residence.

  According to the report, in view of the launch of the second Kishida cabinet, Kyodo News Agency conducted a national emergency telephone poll from the 10th to 11th local time.

The results showed that the approval rate of the Kishida cabinet was 60.5% and the disapproval rate was 23.0%.

  As for the reasons for supporting the cabinet, the survey shows that "there is no other suitable person" accounted for the highest proportion.

Among the reasons for disapproval, "because it is the self-minded and publicly-minded joint cabinet" is the most.

  In terms of party support, among the ruling parties in Japan, the Liberal Democratic Party is 42.7% and the Komeito Party is 7.4%.

With regard to the opposition parties, the Japan Restoration Council accounted for 13.0%. After the last survey, it once again ranked first among the opposition parties.

  In addition, as one of the support policies to deal with the new crown epidemic, Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party and the Komeito Party have reached an agreement recently that they will provide a subsidy equivalent to 100,000 yen (approximately RMB 5,594) to people under the age of 18. A consensus was reached on the policy of setting an annual income limit of 9.6 million yen (approximately RMB 537,000) on the occasion of the distribution.

  In this regard, only 19.3% of people think it is "appropriate".

There are also some people who are dissatisfied with the age of the recipients and the restrictions on annual income.

Negative opinions are deeply ingrained.