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This Week in AsiaPolitics

Japan’s ruling LDP under fire after junior members’ party with go-go dancers: ‘completely unacceptable’

  • Two members of the LDP’s youth wing resigned after reports surfaced that politicians and their supporters were being entertained by scantily clad dancers
  • PM Fumio Kishida is already struggling in option polls after a slew of earlier scandals, including the LDP’s ties to the Unification Church

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Japan’s ruling LDP is facing another crisis after reports of junior members of the party attending a party involving “go-go dancing”. Photo: Kyodo
Julian Ryall

Two senior members of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s youth wing have resigned from their posts after reports surfaced that politicians and their supporters were being entertained by scantily clad dancers at a gathering in central Japan.

The party was organised in November for the youth division of the party in Wakayama prefecture, and reportedly involved banknotes being inserted into dancers’ costumes, and mouth-to-mouth between dancers and participants.

The reports sparked anger in the media and among the public at a time when Prime Minister Fumio Kishida was already struggling in opinion polls after a slew of earlier scandals, including the LDP’s ties to the Unification Church and dozens of party members pocketing profits from events to raise money for the party and failing to report donations for tax purposes.

The party confirmed that Takashi Fujiwara, 40, stepped down as director of the LDP’s Youth Division, along with Yasutaka Nakasone, 42, an acting director of the division.

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Speaking to the media on Friday, Fujiwara said, “I apologise for my behaviour, which was inappropriate and undermined public trust.”

Renge Jibu, an associate professor specialising in gender and media studies at the Tokyo Institute of Technology, said she initially found it difficult to believe that politicians had taken part in such an event.

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“It is unbelievably ridiculous,” she told This Week in Asia. “You could argue that decades ago these sorts of parties used to happen, but under the current standards expected in our society, this is completely unacceptable.”

It really is hard to believe this sort of thinking still exists
Renge Jibu, gender and media studies professor
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