WORLD> Asia-Pacific
    Japan's new PM ready to 'change history'
    By Zhang Haizhou, Peng Kuang  and Tan yingzi in Beijing and AP in Tokyo (China Daily)
    Updated: 2009-09-17 07:01

    Japan's longtime opposition leader, Yukio Hatoyama, was elected as the nation's 93rd prime minister Wednesday, installing his new Cabinet and promising to reinvigorate the country's economy and shake up its government.

    His left-of-center Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) ended more than 50 years of near unbroken rule by the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).

    Japan's new PM ready to 'change history'

    Japan's new Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama speaks during his first news conference as premier at his official residence in Tokyo September 16, 2009. Hatoyama said on Wednesday building a relationship of trust will be the top priority when he meets President Barack Obama in the United States next week. [Agencies] Japan's new PM ready to 'change history'

    Hatoyama has pledged to smooth Tokyo's often-bumpy relationship with its Asian neighbors and forge a foreign policy that is more independent from Washington.

    The new prime minister said he wanted to build a "relationship of trust" with President Barack Obama by exchanging views "frankly". The two leaders will meet next week while Hatoyama is in the US for a UN climate change summit, a General Assembly debate, nuclear non-proliferation talks and the G20 summit.

    Hatoyama will then travel to China on Oct 10, for a summit with Premier Wen Jiabao and South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, according to the Kyodo News Agency.

    He is expected to visit South Korea after that, the report said.

    Unlike previous governments in Japan, the DPJ wants to shift the nation's focus away from the US and toward its Asian neighbors, said Gao Hong, from the Japan studies institute at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

    The new Japanese government "will treat Japan's ties with Asian countries, particularly with China, as equally important to its relations with the US," Gao said.

    Beijing should be "optimistic and cautious" when dealing with Tokyo, he said.

    "Even though the DPJ has always attached great importance to ties with China, it is almost inevitable that someone in Japan will use sensitive issues to hurt the bilateral ties when the DPJ is in power," Gao said. "Hatoyama's government should hold back before trying to deal with those sensitive issues."

    Experts have described Hatoyama's victory as a major turning point for Japan, which is struggling through its most severe economic slowdown since World War II.

    He has vowed to cut government waste, rein in bureaucracy and restart the economy by putting a freeze on previously planned tax hikes.

    "I am excited by the prospect of changing history," Hatoyama said. "The battle starts now."

    Against the backdrop of record unemployment and mounting deflation, Hatoyama's detractors question whether his largely untested government will be able to deliver.

    However, many observers have applauded his choice of ministers and suggested that if the new government is able to avoid scandal and build up a track record, it could remain in power for the long haul.

    Parliament met yesterday for a special session to formally select Hatoyama, whose party won a landslide victory during parliamentary elections last month. In yesterday's parliamentary vote, Hatoyama won 327 of the 480 available ballots. He needed just 241 votes to be declared prime minister.

    Huo Jiangang, a Japan expert at the China Institutes of Contemporary International Studies, said Hatoyama unveiled an "all-star Cabinet".

    "Most of the Cabinet members are key figures from the DPJ," Huo said, adding that Hatoyama gave the most important positions to the most capable people.

    Japan's economyremains deeply impacted by the global financial crisis.

    The nation's rapidly aging population is becoming an increasingly serious drain on public coffers and another challenge for the new prime minister, with the number of taxpayers decreasing and the number of people qualifying for a pension swelling.

    "I want the people to feel that their pocketbook situation is improving, even a little, as soon as possible," Hatoyama said.

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