Japan's Tomic News website reported on July 4 that the former mayor of Yokohama City, Japan, Hiroshi Nakata, asserted on the "Viking" program of Fuji TV broadcast on the 4th that the listeners calling for "Abe to step down" were "organized activists".
According to the report, the program team produced a special episode about Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who gave his first and last street speech in Akihabara on the last day of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government election on July 2, referred to the audience calling for him to "step down" as "this kind of person" and shouted "We will never lose to this kind of person!". In this regard, the evaluation on the Japanese Internet was mixed, with Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga saying that "we are a democratic country with the freedom to hold election activities" and that "speeches are within the allowable range and are very normal speech."
In the program, the host Sakaue shinobu looked surprised, saying that "it turns out that Prime Minister Abe is a violent temper", what is important is that "once this matter is taken seriously, it will be lost", "how to deal with this situation", "I didn't expect to actually choke on the other party".
When asked about the opinion of the show's guest, Hiromi, he said that he was "very surprised", "If it is someone else, such as the defense of inada (Tomomi), it will be more troublesome", "It is not so much that he is hot-blooded, but rather angry", "How can you be easily provoked by the other party!" What surprised Sakaue even more was Suga's statement that he was "too protective of the Abe government."
On the one hand, former Yokohama Mayor Nakata said that "discerning people know at a glance that they are organized (Prime Minister Abe) opposition activists." Abe is also well aware of this, estimating that "what he did" is the same as that of the DPP, which refuted it in Congress. But Nakata said that "activists are also members of the national population" and that Abe's words and deeds under the fury were inappropriate.
Sakaue again indignantly said, "As the Chief Cabinet Secretary said, we have freedom of speech, but are ordinary citizens the same as the 'supreme power of the country'?" "The two are completely unequal in weight, and the pressure is completely different." (Intern Editor: Zhao Shuang)