<p>Japan's ruling party on Monday elected chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga as its new leader, making him all but certain to replace Shinzo Abe as the country's next prime minister.</p>.<p>Suga easily won the ballot, taking 377 of a total of 534 valid votes from Liberal Democratic Party lawmakers and regional representatives.</p>.<p>His rivals, former defence minister Shigeru Ishiba and LDP policy chief Fumio Kishida, trailed far behind.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/japan-pm-candidate-suga-is-self-made-powerful-adviser-887227.html" target="_blank">Japan PM candidate Suga is self-made, powerful adviser</a></strong></p>.<p>Given the LDP's legislative majority, Suga is expected to handily win a parliamentary vote Wednesday and become prime minister, taking over from Abe, who is resigning for health reasons.</p>.<p>A powerful government adviser and spokesman, 71-year-old Suga is seen as promising stability and a continuation of Abe's policies.</p>.<p>He has specifically said his candidacy was motivated by a desire to continue the outgoing prime minister's programmes.</p>.<p>Ishiba, who is popular with the Japanese public but less so within his own party, won just 68 votes, with Kishida, who was once considered Abe's favoured successor, taking 89.</p>.<p>Abe, who smashed records as Japan's longest-serving prime minister before being forced to resign after a recurrence of ulcerative colitis, declined to publicly endorse any candidate.</p>.<p>The son of a strawberry farmer, Suga was raised in Japan's northern Akita region, and the issues of rural areas suffering depopulation are said to be among his top concerns.</p>.<p>But not much is known about his personal ideology, and he is generally viewed as an adherent of neither the LDP's most hawkish nor its more reformist wings.</p>.<p>As prime minister, he will face a series of tough challenges, including containing the coronavirus and righting the world's third-biggest economy, which was in recession even before the pandemic.</p>
<p>Japan's ruling party on Monday elected chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga as its new leader, making him all but certain to replace Shinzo Abe as the country's next prime minister.</p>.<p>Suga easily won the ballot, taking 377 of a total of 534 valid votes from Liberal Democratic Party lawmakers and regional representatives.</p>.<p>His rivals, former defence minister Shigeru Ishiba and LDP policy chief Fumio Kishida, trailed far behind.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/japan-pm-candidate-suga-is-self-made-powerful-adviser-887227.html" target="_blank">Japan PM candidate Suga is self-made, powerful adviser</a></strong></p>.<p>Given the LDP's legislative majority, Suga is expected to handily win a parliamentary vote Wednesday and become prime minister, taking over from Abe, who is resigning for health reasons.</p>.<p>A powerful government adviser and spokesman, 71-year-old Suga is seen as promising stability and a continuation of Abe's policies.</p>.<p>He has specifically said his candidacy was motivated by a desire to continue the outgoing prime minister's programmes.</p>.<p>Ishiba, who is popular with the Japanese public but less so within his own party, won just 68 votes, with Kishida, who was once considered Abe's favoured successor, taking 89.</p>.<p>Abe, who smashed records as Japan's longest-serving prime minister before being forced to resign after a recurrence of ulcerative colitis, declined to publicly endorse any candidate.</p>.<p>The son of a strawberry farmer, Suga was raised in Japan's northern Akita region, and the issues of rural areas suffering depopulation are said to be among his top concerns.</p>.<p>But not much is known about his personal ideology, and he is generally viewed as an adherent of neither the LDP's most hawkish nor its more reformist wings.</p>.<p>As prime minister, he will face a series of tough challenges, including containing the coronavirus and righting the world's third-biggest economy, which was in recession even before the pandemic.</p>