Shoutarou Kishida: “He’s a Political Secretary, but he’s not at the Prime Minister’s Office at all” – The Bad Behind the Scenes of the Riots | FRIDAY DIGITAL

Shoutarou Kishida: “He’s a Political Secretary, but he’s not at the Prime Minister’s Office at all” – The Bad Behind the Scenes of the Riots

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On the right is Shoutarou, a parliamentary secretary. He is the literal “heart” of Prime Minister Kishida, who has few allies. ……/Jiji Press

Recently, Shotaro Kishida, 32, has not been visiting the Prime Minister’s Office at all. There is a monitor in the Prime Minister’s Office that lights up when a political secretary enters the office, but Kishida’s name is not lit up at all times, and we only occasionally see him coming and going at the entrance of the office in the morning and in the evening,” said a member of the major media political section.

I only sometimes see him coming and going at the entrance of the Prime Minister’s Office in the morning and evening,” said a major media reporter in the political section.

Takashi Shimada, 63, a parliamentary secretary, is basically at the PM residence because he is in overall charge, but his secretaries take turns being ‘accompanying secretaries’ every day. He accompanies Prime Minister Kishida when he goes out for dinner, but it is rare that Kishida accompanies him. He is basically acting ‘alone.

When he was hired in the fall of 2010, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (65) criticized him as a “nepotistic hire,” and when he accompanied Prime Minister Kishida on a visit to Europe and the United States in January of this year, it was reported that he was sightseeing in an official car, which caused a great deal of public criticism. One wonders if he was instructed to “hide” his own son so that he would not be put in the spotlight again at a naïve moment in terms of approval ratings. …… There was a reason why Shoutarou was away from the prime minister’s office.

A source in the LDP revealed that “Shoutarou was absent from the prime minister’s office for a little while.

He was visiting the offices of Prime Minister Kishida in his capacity as his deputy for the local elections. When the prime minister goes there, security has to be tight, and he has to coordinate with the police and the parliamentary party. It is part of the “job” for a political secretary to visit supporters with a candidate on behalf of the prime minister. However, to be clear, Shoutarou does not have strong personal connections or influence. I suspect he had some other role to play.”

The reason why Shoutarou did not disclose the details of his actions may be that he had something to be guilty of.

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