Broader ballot
Japan’s last general election in 2014 returned prime minister Shinzo Abe to power with a 52.66 per cent turnout, the lowest on record. With upper house elections coming this summer, the government has realised that it needs to make it easier for people to vote. A revision of the Public Offices Election Law enacted yesterday will allow voters to cast their ballots in train stations and shopping centres. At the moment people can only vote on election day at a designated polling station in their neighbourhood. The new law opens the way for polling stations in busy commercial centres that anyone eligible to vote will be able to use, which also allows local governments to extend voting hours. Taking effect just in time for the elections on 19 June, the law is designed to engage a frequently apathetic public. The voting age will also fall from 20 to 18, bringing 2.4 million first-timers to the elections.