Source: Huanqiu.com
According to a report by the Japan Broadcasting Association (NHK) on the 20th, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida visited the "2023 News Photo Exhibition" held in Tokyo on the same day to review the events that occurred this year.
During the visit, Kishida reportedly signed his name on a group photo of the leaders of the Group of Seven (G7) summit in Hiroshima in May this year and a group photo of the leaders of the Camp David summit of the United States, Japan and South Korea in August. As part of the event, he also picked up his camera to take photos of the press corps. In his speech after the visit, Kishida said, "I hope that tomorrow will be able to build a better Japan than today." ”
Fumio Kishida signed a group photo taken by South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol, U.S. President Joe Biden and himself on the occasion of the Camp David summit in August this year. The picture is taken from the website of the Cabinet of Ministers of Japan
On December 20, Fumio Kishida picked up his camera to take a photo of the press corps. The picture is taken from the website of the Cabinet of Ministers of Japan
The news of Fumio Kishida's visit was intensively reported by the Japanese media, but Kishida's positive remarks did not receive a positive reaction from Japanese netizens. Someone sarcastically said, "Next year's photo exhibition will feature photos of forced searches and the mass arrest of LDP lawmakers." ”
Some Japanese netizens said: "It's already so bad, anyone can get better." ”
Some people commented that Fumio Kishida was the culprit that led to "a Japan worse than yesterday".
There are also people who say that there are many things they want to say, but the first one is that "as long as this man is alive, there will be no future for Japan."
Recently, the funding scandal of the "Abe faction" and other factions of the Liberal Democratic Party has continued to ferment, and Japanese prosecutors have launched an investigation, and whether the politicians of the Liberal Democratic Party will be judged criminally responsible has become the focus of attention. The approval rating of the Kishida cabinet also fell to the bottom. According to the latest poll results released by Japan's "Mainichi Shimbun" on the 17th, the approval rating of the cabinet led by Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida continued to decline, falling 5 percentage points from mid-November to 16 percent, and the disapproval rate rose 5 percentage points to 79 percent, the highest since the media began this survey in 1947.