Economic problems turn voters away from mainstream parties
By Sharon Moshavi, Globe Correspondent, 6/18/2000
TOKYO - Motoki Sobue couldn't hide it anymore. The subterfuge was killing him. So the
university student got drunk, telephoned his parents, and shouted out his secret: ''I am a
communist!''
Terrified of what might happen next, he slammed down the receiver. But Sobue was shocked by
his family's reaction. They weren't angry.
''Later, I went home and explained everything, and now they vote communist, too. Even my
grandmother,'' said Sobue, now 25.
In Japan these days, being a communist is nothing to be ashamed of. Communism may be out of
favor with most of the world as it rushes feverishly to embrace free-market capitalism, but the
78-year-old Japanese Communist Party is gaining popularity in the world's second-largest
economy.
The party is attracting an increasing number of disaffected Japanese - young voters like Sobue, as
well as older ones who are tired of politics as usual. The Communist Party's populist preaching
about workers' rights and social welfare is finding an audience in a country suffering from an
economic rut that has destroyed financial security for many.
Kazuo Shii, a party leader and a second-generation communist, is credited with orchestrating the
party's renaissance. Shii, 45, though unprepossessing of appearance with his fleshy face and big
glasses, is something of an anomaly among Japanese politicians: He's articulate, even charismatic.
He pops up regularly on television, on everything from political round tables to variety shows. He
plays the piano, he likes the opera.
Most importantly, he has dropped hard-line communist dogma. Some say he doesn't sound much
like a communist. ''In our view, communism and socialism are inseparable from democracy,'' he
said in a recent interview at the party's four-story headquarters, which will soon be replaced by an
11-story tower.
Dressed in an ill-fitting gray pinstripe suit, his black hair slicked down, Shii said the violent
overthrow of capitalism does not quite make the party's agenda. Instead he voiced concern about
overtime pay for workers, with controlling the country's spiraling debt, and with balancing out
Japan's ''subservient'' relationship with the United States.
In fact, the Communists may be more in favor of a market economy than the ruling party, which is
trying to increase state intervention and state power, said Shigenori Okazaki, a political analyst with
Warburg Dillon Reed. ''It sounds rather ironic, but the Communists do see some of the things that
the market mechanism can improve for workers,'' Okazaki said.
The party's goal at the moment, Shii said, is to reform capitalism. ''We envision a socialist society in
the future, but we are not calling for it just now,'' he said.
His earliest time frame is about 100 years from now, and even then, it will be more like an evolution
than a revolution.
In the meantime, ''Just say no'' might well be the Communist Party's motto. As the second-largest
opposition party in Japan, it has set itself up as perhaps the loudest opponent of the status quo. No
matter the issue, it provides vocal opposition to almost anything the ruling party proposes.
That seems to strike a chord with Japanese, even those who don't support the Communists. ''We
need a strong opposition, someone who will challenge things,'' said Mieko Yamashita, 58, a retired
civil servant.
Like many Japanese, though, she doesn't want them to get too strong. ''They make Japanese
politics vivid, but I don't think they should ever lead the country,'' she said.
Currently, the Japanese Communist Party holds 14 percent of the seats in the Diet. Prime Minister
Yoshiro Mori, who dissolved Parliament Friday, has called for elections on June 25, and many
analysts expect the Communist Party to do better, but not well enough to significantly change its
position.
Many are still suspicious of the Communist Party, especially in the business community. They voice
worry about the party's growing appeal with frustrated voters.
In a recent article in the Mainichi Shimbun, one of Japan's leading newspapers, Toyota's chairman,
Hiroshi Okuda, was quoted as saying, ''If they change their name, we had better watch out.''
There has been widespread speculation that the party intends to do exactly that, as analysts agree
that it would indeed boost the party's standing. Party officials say they have received many letters
from voters suggesting a name change, but Shii insists that the Japanese Communist Party will
remain just that. ''We have the history and ideals of our party in this name,'' he said.
The party was founded in 1922, and was illegal through World War II. It was one of the sole
voices in Japan to speak up against the war, and that legacy earned the party a measure of respect.
The Japanese Communists have long steered independent of their counterparts in the Soviet Union
and China. When the Soviet Union collapsed, the party issued a statement welcoming the
implosion. The Russian model wasn't communism, Shii insists, because it didn't have freedom and
democracy.
Under Shii, the party has been particularly effective at winning local elections. Almost 4,500
Communist Party members serve as local assembly members. And they can be effective at helping
citizens organize. ''If you want to stop a nuclear power plant or something, they help stop it.
Nobody else will,'' said Steven R. Reed, a political science professor at Chuo University in Tokyo.
The party newspaper, Akahata, has gone from a propaganda sheet to a paper perceived as real. It
uncovers scandals and pays attention to stories the normally timid mainstream media does not. The
Sunday edition has almost 2 million subscribers.
This new face of Japanese Communism is managing to attract younger members in particular.
Makoto Abe, 25, got involved with the party several years ago, after it was revealed that
HIV-infected blood was knowingly being distributed. ''The government and companies were
making light of people's lives to make profits,'' said Abe, who wore a bright orange Denver
Broncos T-shirt.
He thinks too many people misunderstand communism. Today, working with the party's youth
wing, he has come up with his own definition: ''to think of the suffering of the people and find a
solution.''
This story ran on page A21 of the Boston Globe on 6/18/2000.
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