The DPJ Needs to Shed Its Arrogance
Party has inflated view of self since the Hatoyama government took over in
September 2009
done
Over the course of the past year, the Democratic Party of Japan has
succumbed to arrogance and selfishness.
The DPJ's arrogance surfaced when then Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama
began discussing his united party theory.
Hatoyama was after his own rehabilitation. It was the ultimate
expression of the "me-ism" of the party -- Hatoyama's brand of egoism. It's
clear that as the former premier worked to strengthen the Ozawa-Hatoyama-Kan
triumvirate, he was really working to rehabilitate his own position. When
his government stepped down in the first half of June, he announced that he
would not run in the next election, choosing to retire. "As someone who has
experience being prime minister, I will not offer comments on the current
state of politics," he said at the time. But Hatoyama later withdrew this
comment. The troika system was supposed to be the first step for Hatoyama's
return, but the strategy failed.
The troika system was responsible for betraying the people's expectation
for regime change. If the DPJ doesn't destroy and get out from under this
system, it has no future. Hatoyama confused the Futenma issue on Okinawa;
former party chief Ichiro Ozawa's money scandal was ignored by the Diet; and
Prime Minister Naoto Kan continues to obfuscate on the consumption-tax
issue. These three lost the trust the people placed in a DPJ government.
Hatoyama's aim was to perpetuate this troika. It's perfectly natural for an
idea inflated with so much conceit to fail.
Backroom politics came up with the perpetual troika idea. At one point,
the party leaders discussed doing away with party elections. That would
result in the 34,000 party members having their authority stripped from
them. Democracy within the party would have been trampled upon. And it would
have brought about the perpetual rule of shadow boss Ozawa. The DPJ needs to
fight this aggressively. Party members need to swear off the arrogance and
conceit that emerged when the DPJ took power in 2009 and pledge to fix the
party.