
Campaigning began on Thursday in an election expected to strengthen Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s control over parliament, ushering in the stability he needs to fix Japan’s floundering economy.

With approval ratings as high as 70 per cent, Abe is expected to romp home, bagging control of both chambers and not having to face a public vote for three years.
Supporters say he will use that political clout to force changes on cosseted and inefficient industries, like agriculture, and to cut a swathe through labour laws that businesses claim make it too difficult to hire and fire workers.
Detractors say he will abandon the economic project of his first six months and get back on his hobby horse – revising the constitution, boosting the military and re-assessing Japan’s wartime history.
“We want to ... stabilise politics and bring you the actual feeling” that the economy is picking up, Abe said in a party leaders’ debate on Wednesday.