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Rains may dampen Japan election day

October 21, 2017 00:00:00


TOKYO, Oct 20 (AFP): A typhoon is expected to lash Japan with heavy rains Sunday, potentially weighing on turnout as millions of voters head to the polls in the world's third-biggest economy.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe appealed to voters to cast their ballots early as Typhoon Lan moves towards Japan bringing driving rain across the country on the election day.

"It's rare to see typhoon rains over such a large swathe of the Japanese archipelago in October," Eiju Takahashi, an official with the Japan Meteorological Agency, told AFP.

Only the northern island of Hokkaido is expected to be spared the downpour on Sunday, added Takahashi.

Abe himself cast his vote on Wednesday in Tokyo, telling reporters that the weekend election "would decide Japan's future" and urging voters to cast ballots early in anticipation of bad weather.

Turnout has declined to below 60 percent in the last two general elections. The last election in December 2014 saw a record-low rate of 52.66 percent.

"If it rains on Sunday, the turnout rate will not rise and that would benefit the ruling bloc," said Mikitaka Masuyama, political scientist at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies.


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