Saturday, October 21, 2023

CHICAGO
FOP and city reach tentative contract deal that provides 20% raises over four years

By Sam Charles and A.D. Quig
Chicago Tribune

Last Updated: Oct 20, 2023 


Chicago police recruits salute during a graduation and promotion ceremony at Navy Pier on June 5, 2023. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)

The city of Chicago and the union representing rank-and-file police officers have reached a tentative agreement on a new four-year contract that would provide a roughly 20% raise for officers and allow those accused of serious misconduct to have their disciplinary cases decided behind closed doors.

Chicago Police Department officers and detectives would receive a 5% pay hike in both 2024 and 2025, and cost-of-living raises — likely between 3% and 5% — in 2026 and 2027. What’s more, each of the more than 10,000 active duty CPD officers in the FOP would receive a one-time $2,500 retention bonus, regardless of how long they’ve worked for the department, according to City Hall sources and an internal union email provided to the Tribune.

The deal marks Johnson’s first major union agreement since taking office five months ago. And it was reached with a group whose leader was one of Johnson’s loudest detractors during the mayoral campaign. In the spring, Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7 President John Catanzara predicted a rank-and-file exodus and “blood in the streets” if Johnson, a former labor organizer himself who publicly supported redirecting police funding to other public services to address violence, took office.

But Catanzara’s public condemnations have softened. He supported Johnson’s pick of Larry Snelling as CPD superintendent and agreed to work with Johnson’s administration on broad solutions to the city’s pension woes.

It’s unclear what impact the agreement could have on the city’s bottom line. Johnson’s administration said in a statement that the agreement was “fair and in alignment with Chicago’s current policing needs, economic landscape, and budgetary capabilities” while acknowledging it had concerns about the stipulation dealing with disciplinary cases.

[ Chicago aldermen, activists call for city to keep police hearings public ]

Snelling is scheduled to appear Tuesday before the City Council to discuss the department’s budget. While head count is staying steady, the department’s overall budget for 2024 is rising $91 million to just under $2 billion. That figure has traditionally not included the cost of police pensions, overruns in overtime and legal settlements, or benefits.

In a statement Friday, the Police Department said the proposed agreement “mirror(s) other union bargaining agreements within the city,” but added, “the Department disagrees with the decision to allow disciplinary cases involving separation or suspension of more than one year to be closed to the public.”

When Mayor Lori Lightfoot and the FOP landed a deal on improved pay in 2021, it included $365 million in retroactive pay increases dating back to 2017. The union was entitled to a 2% raise in 2024 and 2% in 2025. The Lightfoot agreement also included a series of new accountability measures, but several issues were left unresolved for Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration to pick up.

The latest agreement, which according to City Hall sources was approved Thursday by arbitrator Edwin Benn, is still subject to approval by the City Council’s Committee on Workforce Development. The proposal would then require passage by the full City Council before it takes effect. The contract would end June 30, 2027.

“We took a lot of slings and arrows over the last couple years and I got it … but we never took our eye off the prize about getting the best possible result at the end of this process, and that’s where we’re at now,” Catanzara said Friday in a video announcing the proposed agreement.

The most controversial element of the contract appears to be a provision that Benn awarded to the union allowing officers to opt to have disciplinary cases decided by an arbitrator out of public view instead of by the city’s Police Board.

Johnson’s office said in its statement that the city was “deeply disappointed in the arbitrator’s decision to claw back transparency,” and that the administration “remains committed to moving forward with any avenue available to keep the police disciplinary process transparent” and would focus “on implementing accountability measures within the Chicago Police Department, supporting police offices and a robust community safety agenda.”

The agreement also includes a paid parental leave policy, allows for the creation of a “Homicide Teams Pilot program” and “enshrines several accountability measures” that are part of the federal consent decree the department remains under.

The department entered into a court-ordered consent decree following the 2014 murder of Laquan McDonald by a Chicago police officer.

To boost CPD’s transparency and accountability, the City Council also has altered and expanded agencies in charge of officer discipline, including transforming the Independent Police Review Authority into the Civilian Office of Police Accountability and creating a new elected civilian body to help shape CPD policy.

Some progressive aldermen, including workforce chairman Ald. Mike Rodriguez, 22nd, said they had yet to be briefed on any final contract language but would hesitate to support any deal that included the arbitrator provisions.

[ CPD consent decree in danger of failing, former city IG says ]

“Especially coming out of the Laquan McDonald case and everything that followed from that — including, but not limited to, the consent decree — we should be looking for every opportunity to strengthen transparency and accountability mechanisms,” said Ald. Matt Martin, 47th, who previously worked on drafting the consent decree in the Illinois attorney general’s office. “This flies in the face of that.”

The public has been clamoring for more accountability for years, argued Ald. Maria Hadden, 49th.

“In order to build trust, we need to build transparency,” she said, noting the public needs to know what happened in instances of alleged police wrongdoing.

The contract’s arbitration process was thrust into public view earlier this year after Benn ruled officers accused of serious misconduct can have their cases heard by an independent arbitrator behind closed doors if they so choose. Those cases have been decided in public by the Police Board for 60 years.

In August, shortly after Benn’s ruling was handed down, the FOP tried to move 22 pending cases from the Police Board’s docket to a third-party. However, attorneys for the city and CPD were quick to note Benn’s ruling was not binding and the board later shot down the union’s effort.

Catanzara told union members Friday the arbitration ruling was in line with “an option that this lodge had always had the ability to exercise.”

“That’s what every other collective bargaining agreement affords members, is arbitration for termination cases, and that’s all we are asking for here,” Catanzara said. “If members and our attorneys think our members will get a fairer shake at the Police Board on a certain case, then so be it. That will be the officer’s decision to go that route. But this is standard labor practice and I hope the City Council members can appreciate (that). If you are the party of labor you should be respectful of that provision, even if you are not 100% in agreement with it.”

In a budget hearing this week, outgoing Police Board President Ghian Foreman contrasted the arbitration process — in which charges are not publicly available and hearings are closed — to the board, which posts charges publicly, holds disciplinary hearings in public, and posts evidence and detailed explanations of findings. Allowing those cases to be decided privately would be a blow to the city’s goals of transparency and accountability, he said.


Foreman was hit with a police baton during a 2020 protest over the killing of George Floyd. He said that case went to arbitration and “I still don’t know what happened.”

“I think this would be a big mistake, not just for you guys to vote for this but even for the police to say this is what we want. I don’t think it advances our city,” he said.

Max Caproni, the board’s executive director, said in the past five years, 103 cases were filed that recommended an officer be terminated. Of those, 92 involved rank-and-file cops represented by the FOP.

“Our expectation would be that very few, if any, of those cases would come to the Police Board if this change takes effect,” Caproni said. “Bottom line, I think about 90% of our docket, we would lose that, if this change took effect.”

The board currently has 27 open cases. Of those, 25 involve FOP members — five deal with allegations of unjustified shootings, two are for shootings that involve false statements, three are excessive force cases and five involve gender-based violence or domestic altercations. Caproni said under the new system, “very serious cases” such as those “would likely go to arbitration.”

Though the union has argued it is entitled to the same private disciplinary hearings as other unionized workers, Hadden said the power officers hold calls for a higher standard of accountability.

“I do think arbitration is a good and proven process,” Hadden said, but “there are things, if you’ve killed someone on the job, there’s an action or something on duty that caused the death or severe injury of someone else, the types of things we see in lawsuits, there are higher levels of responsibility that our public servants, but especially police officers, take on. … There’s a higher authority you have to answer to. It’s the public.”

scharles@chicagotribune.com

aquig@chicagotribune.com
Originally Published: Oct 20, 2023 at 4:11 pm
Justin Trudeau says world should be worried about India's action

ByVaibhav Tiwari
Oct 21, 2023 

Canada on Friday withdrew 41 diplomats from India days after New Delhi insisted on their removal alleging interference in internal affairs.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said by revoking diplomatic immunity to 40 diplomats, India contravened a “very basic principle of diplomacy”. Continuing his tirade against India on Friday, he said New Delhi violated the Vienna Convention and all countries in the world should be worried about the move. He also broached the subject of the murder of Khalistan terrorist Hardeep Singh Nijjar. He also said India was making it "unbelievably difficult for life as usual to continue for millions of people in India and in Canada".

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau(Reuters)

"The actions that the Government of India took this week are themselves contrary to international law. The Government of India decided to unilaterally revoke the diplomatic immunity of 40 Canadian diplomats in India. This is a violation of the Vienna Convention governing diplomacy...It is something that all countries in the world should be worried about and this is putting aside the allegations we made of a serious violation of international law with the alleged killing of a Canadian citizen on Canadian soil that the Indian government could have been involved in," he said.
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"The Government of India decided to revoke the diplomatic protections of 40 diplomats working in India...The Indian government is making it unbelievably difficult for life as usual to continue for millions of people in India and in Canada and they're doing it by contravening a very basic principle of diplomacy," he added.

He was speaking at an event in Brampton on Friday.

Canada on Friday withdrew 41 diplomats from India days after New Delhi insisted on their removal alleging interference in internal affairs. New Delhi had asked for the removal saying it wanted to achieve parity in the number of diplomatic staff stationed in India and Canada.

The Ministry of External Affairs, in a statement on Friday, dismissed Canada's allegations that international law had been violated by its action.

"The state of our bilateral relations, the much higher number of Canadian diplomats in India, and their continued interference in our internal affairs warrant a parity in mutual diplomatic presence in New Delhi and Ottawa.”

Minister of Foreign Affairs Mélanie Joly said Ottawa has “decided not to reciprocate” even as the development was defined as “expulsion” of the Canadian diplomats.


India defended its actions for diplomatic parity by saying they are fully consistent with Article 11.1 of the Vienna Convention. This article states: “In the absence of specific agreement as to the size of the mission, the receiving State may require that the size of a mission be kept within limits considered by it to be reasonable and normal, having regard to circumstances and conditions in the receiving State and to the needs of the particular mission.”

Meanwhile, the US and UK, in support of Canada, have expressed concerns over the departure of Canadian diplomats from India.

"We are concerned by the departure of Canadian diplomats from India, in response to the Indian government's demand of Canada to significantly reduce its diplomatic presence in India," US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said.


"We do not agree with the decisions taken by the Indian government that have resulted in a number of Canadian diplomats departing India," a spokesperson for Britain's Foreign Office said.

With inputs from Reuters, ANI



India hits back at Canada as dispute over diplomats escalates


Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said “many countries” are concerned about India forcing 41 Canadian diplomats to leave, adding the move will primarily punish the vast number of Indians and Canadians with ties between the two countries.

“The Indian government is making it unbelievably difficult for life as usual to continue for millions of people in India and in Canada,” Trudeau told reporters Friday, giving examples of students, extended families and business relationships. “And they’re doing it by contravening a very basic principle of diplomacy.”

He said the move “has far-reaching consequences for the diplomatic world that I know many, many countries are very worried about.”

The diplomatic row is the latest escalation since Trudeau accused India’s government of helping to orchestrate the killing of a Sikh separatist activist on Canadian soil. 

Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly said Thursday that her government relocated 41 staff from its embassy and consulates in India after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government threatened to revoke their immunity. She called the action “unreasonable and escalatory” and a violation of the Vienna convention on diplomatic relations.

India reiterated Friday it wanted the two countries to have “parity” in diplomatic presence and had been in talks with Canada over the past month about how to implement this. It said its actions were consistent with Article 11.1 of the Vienna convention, which states that a country can limit a foreign mission if there’s no specific agreement on its size.

“We reject any attempt to portray the implementation of parity as a violation of international norms,” the Ministry of External Affairs of India said in its statement. 

“The state of our bilateral relations, the much higher number of Canadian diplomats in India, and their continued interference in our internal affairs warrant a parity in mutual diplomatic presence in New Delhi and Ottawa.”

New Delhi has denied the allegation it was behind the killing of the Sikh activist, and retaliated with several measures including a suspension of visas for Canadians. 

Canada said Thursday the cut to its diplomatic staff “will not distract” from the investigation into the murder of the Sikh activist.   

Ottawa now has 21 diplomats in India, the same number as New Delhi has in Canada. Canada will halt in-person consular services in Chandigarh, Mumbai and Bangalore, slowing down the processing of visas and immigration. Those who need consular assistance can still use the embassy in New Delhi or reach out by phone or email.

Ottawa estimates a backlog of 17,500 visa and immigration application decisions through the end of December, a government official said in a background briefing. 

With assistance from Eltaf Najafizada.


Canadian PM says India's actions making life hard for millions of people

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks during the Canada-Caricom Summit in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, on Oct 18, 2023.

PUBLISHED ONOCTOBER 20, 2023

OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Friday (Oct 20) the Indian government's crackdown on Canadian diplomats was making normal life difficult for millions of people in both countries.

Trudeau spoke a day after Canada said it had withdrawn 41 diplomats following an Indian threat to unilaterally revoke their status.

New Delhi is angry that Trudeau last month suggested Indian agents might have been involved in the June murder of a Sikh separatist leader in Canada. India denies the allegation.

"The Indian government is making it unbelievably difficult for life as usual to continue for millions of people in India and in Canada. And they're doing it by contravening a very basic principle of diplomacy," Trudeau said.

"It's something that has me very concerned for the wellbeing and happiness of millions of Canadians who trace their origins to the Indian subcontinent," he told reporters at a televised press conference in Brampton, Ontario.

Trudeau said the expulsion of some of Canada's diplomats will hamper travel and trade and pose difficulties for Indians studying in Canada.


Around two million Canadians, 5per cent of the overall population, have Indian heritage. India is by far Canada's largest source of global students, making up for roughly 40 per cent of study permit holders.

The Indian foreign ministry earlier rejected the idea it had violated the Vienna convention on diplomatic relations.



Canada wants private talks with India to resolve diplomatic spat


"The state of our bilateral relations, the much higher number of Canadian diplomats in India, and their continued interference in our internal affairs warrant a parity in mutual diplomatic presence in New Delhi and Ottawa," it said in a statement. Canada now has 21 diplomats remaining in India.

The US State Department on Friday backed Canada in the dispute over diplomats.

"We have urged the Indian government not to insist upon a reduction in Canada's diplomatic presence and to co-operate in the ongoing Canadian investigation," said spokesperson Matthew Miller.

US, UK back Canada in its dispute with India over diplomats

On Thursday, Ottawa said it had withdrawn 41 of its 62 diplomats in India after New Delhi ordered it to reduce its staff.

The United States and the United Kingdom has backed Canada said New Delhi ordered it to reduce its diplomatic staff in India, reported Reuters.

On October 3, the Financial Times reported that India had ordered Canada to withdraw over 40 diplomatic staff from the country.

On Thursday, Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly said that her government had withdrawn 41 of its 62 diplomats from India amid a bilateral tussle over the murder of Sikh separatist leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar.

Joly said that India had threatened to unilaterally revoke the diplomats’ official status by Friday if they did not leave the country. She called this “unreasonable and escalatory” and claimed that New Delhi’s actions violated the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, the cornerstone of international relations and international law.

New Delhi, however, said that it rejects any attempt to portray implementing parity in the strength of diplomatic staff as a violation of international norms.

Washington said on Friday that it takes Canada’s allegations seriously and has urged India to cooperate with Ottawa in the investigation into Nijjar’s killing.

“We are concerned by the departure of Canadian diplomats from India, in response to the Indian government’s demand of Canada to significantly reduce its diplomatic presence in India,” US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said, reported Reuters.

Meanwhile, a Britain Foreign Office spokesperson said: “We do not agree with the decisions taken by the Indian government that have resulted in a number of Canadian diplomats departing India.”

Relations between New Delhi and Ottawa had been growing strained in recent years but they were pushed to a new low after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau alleged on September 18 that Indian agents were involved in Nijjar’s assassination near Vancouver in June.

New Delhi dismissed the allegation as “absurd” and “politically driven”.

Nijjar, a Canadian citizen, was one of India’s most wanted persons. He led the Khalistan Tiger Force, which India has designated a terrorist group. In recent years, India has accused Canada of being soft on the supporters of Khalistan, an independent Sikh nation that some Sikhs hope to establish in northwestern India.

ROFLMAO

UK

Tax cuts are the only hope, Tories tell Sunak: The PM MUST return to traditional Conservative values after Labour wins by-elections in Mid Bedfordshire and Tamworth, party insiders say


  • The Prime Minister has been urged to cut taxes and return to traditional values  

Rishi Sunak was yesterday urged to cut taxes and return to traditional Tory values after stay-at-home Conservative voters handed Labour two devastating by-elections wins.

Keir Starmer said Labour had 'made history' after romping home in the previously safe Tory seats of Mid Bedfordshire and Tamworth. Ministers said the defeats - among the biggest in British political history – had 'killed off' any prospect of a general election before the autumn of next year.

Results suggested that the Labour victories stemmed from thousands of former Conservative voters staying at home.

Turnout was low in both contests, allowing Labour to win without increasing its vote.

Mr Sunak acknowledged that the results were 'disappointing', but insisted he would not change course.

Speaking in Egypt on the last leg of his Middle East tour, the Prime Minister stressed that mid-term elections were 'always difficult for incumbent governments'.

He said that 'local factors' had also played a part – code for the controversy surrounding the departures of former MPs Nadine Dorries and Chris Pincher.

+7

Rishi Sunak was yesterday urged to cut taxes and return to traditional Tory values after stay-at-home Conservative voters handed Labour two devastating by-elections wins


The Prime Minister said that 'local factors' had also played a part – code for the controversy surrounding the departures of former MPs Nadine Dorries (pictured) and Chris Pincher

The Prime Minister said he would 'keep on' trying to deliver his five pledges, but would also 'bring change' in other areas, as he did on net zero last month.

Mrs Dorries hit back last night, branding Mr Sunak's attempt to blame her as 'pathetic'.

She posted on X: 'A worthy leader owns it. He apologises and looks for a way to do better. What he doesn't do is pathetically blame anyone or anything other than himself.'

Shell-shocked Tory MPs yesterday warned the Prime Minister that he now had to do much more to win back traditional supporters.

Former minister Dame Andrea Jenkyns said the Government needed to make 'far-reaching major changes now to instil confidence in the Conservative voters'.

Sir John Redwood said voters wanted the Government 'to stop the boats, improve the quality and efficiency of services and cut taxes to get some growth'.

Former leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith said voters were 'angry with us because of the cost of living and taxation – they want to know they have a government that gets growth going and get taxes down'.

He added: 'This will then allow us to talk about other things, like net zero and woke issues.'


Keir Starmer said Labour had 'made history' after romping home in the previously safe Tory seats of Mid Bedfordshire and Tamworth. Pictured: Newly elected Labour candidate Alistair Strathern with Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer


Newly elected Labour MP Sarah Edwards with party leader Sir Keir Starmer at Tamworth Football Club



Starmer says huge Labour victories must be accepted humbly
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Fellow Tory Danny Kruger also called for tax cuts as he urged the Prime Minister to be 'more coherent, more robust and braver'.

Privately, some ministers called for the resignation of Tory party chairman Greg Hands.

Lib Dems humiliation 

The Liberal Democrats suffered a disappointing night in Mid Bedfordshire as they came a distant third to Labour and the Tories.

The party had hoped to take the rural seat, after MP Nadine Dorries resigned, to add to their string of by-election victories.

Lib-Dem strategists stressed at last month’s party conference that they could smash the ‘Blue Wall’ – former Conservative strongholds – with Mid Bedfordshire next in their sights.

But the party’s candidate Emma Holland-Lindsay finished more than 3,000 votes behind Labour and the Tories. It prompted Lib-Dem officials to suggest that targeting a seat where they came third in 2019 was a step too far.

Deputy Leader Daisy Cooper said: ‘We nearly doubled our share of the vote which would see the Lib Dems win dozens of seats off the Conservatives in a general election.

‘We can play a crucial role in getting rid of this Conservative government.’

But Labour frontbencher Peter Kyle said: ‘The Lib Dems made a lot of noise and heat, but it never translated into action on the ground.’

In Tamworth, the Lib Dems finished joint sixth and lost their deposit.

One said: 'Greg committed the worst sin of all – letting people believe we were going to win at least one of them almost right up until when we lost.'

Polling expert Sir John Curtice said the results were 'extremely bad news' for the Conservatives and could presage a 1997-style Labour landslide next year.

'It is 12 months to go, this isn't destiny, but it is a pointer that unless the Conservatives can fairly dramatically and fairly radically turn things around, then they are staring defeat in the face in 12 months' time,' he said.

Labour saw off stiff competition from the Liberal Democrats to achieve a 23.9 per cent vote swing in Tamworth, and a 20.5 per cent swing in Mid Bedfordshire. Sir Keir hailed the swings as 'phenomenal results' which showed the party was on track for government.

He said Labour was 'redrawing the political map' by taking seats which had been comfortably Conservative.

'Winning in these Tory strongholds shows that people overwhelmingly want change and they're ready to put their faith in our changed Labour Party to deliver it,' he added.

In Mid Befordshire, the seat previously vacated by former culture secretary Mrs Dorries, Labour's Alistair Strathern came out on top in a three-way battle to win by 1,132 votes.

The largely rural constituency had a Tory MP since 1931 and has never been held by Labour in its century-long history. Sarah Edwards took victory in the Tamworth by-election, which was triggered when former chief whip Mr Pincher lost his appeal against a proposed suspension from the Commons for drunkenly groping two men.

The union organiser overturned a Tory majority of more than 19,000 to win the Staffordshire seat. Mr Hands acknowledged the results were disappointing but insisted there was no enthusiasm for Sir Keir among voters, and said there was still time for the Government to turn things round.

AUSTERITY FOR THEE, TAX CUTS FOR ME

Sunak ‘considering tax cuts to lure back lost Tory voters’

Rishi Sunak could be considering major tax cuts in a bid to win over traditional Tory voters after the two by-election defeats this week.

 by Joseph Connor
2023-10-21 11:18
in NewsPolitics


Rishi Sunak could be considering major tax cuts in a bid to win over traditional Tory voters after the two by-election defeats this week.

The threshold for paying the 40% higher rate of income tax could be raised in the 2024 spring budget, according to a report in the Daily Telegraph.

The Times reported that the Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Chancellor Jeremy Hunt are considering cuts to either stamp duty or inheritance tax.

The suggested tax cuts come after Labour claimed “historic” victories by overturning large Conservative majorities in Thursday’s by-elections in Tamworth and Mid-Bedfordshire.

The Telegraph report said about 5.6 million people pay the higher rate of income tax which is levied on earnings over £50,271, with Tory strategists believing “many of them vote Conservative and would be boosted by the tax cut”.

The Times also suggests a tax cut could be on its way in 2024 ahead of the next general election, with the most likely course being a reduction of stamp duty because it is seen to be “aspirational” as it could “boost the economy by making it cheaper to move” and also appeal to middle-aged voters “who had deserted the party”.

Speaking to broadcasters as he prepared to fly back to the UK from meeting leaders in the Middle East, Mr Sunak admitted the by-elections produced “obviously disappointing results” but it was “important to remember the context”.

He said: “Mid-term elections are always difficult for incumbent governments. And of course there are also local factors at play here.”

The Prime Minister added that he remained “committed to delivering on the priorities of the British people” after the defeats.

Mr Sunak said he would “keep on” with his five priorities, which include halving inflation and stopping migrants in small boats crossing the Channel.

A Downing Street spokeswoman declined to comment on the reports and added: “I wouldn’t be able to speculate ahead of a fiscal event.”
HE GETS IT (DESPITE ITS ULTIMATE FAILURE)
Japan’s Kishida Orders Temporary Tax Cuts Ahead of By-Elections


Fumio Kishida
Photographer: Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg

By Isabel Reynolds and Yuki Hagiwara
October 20, 2023 

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida instructed his ruling party executives to consider introducing temporary tax cuts, days before two special elections in which his ruling party faces tough opposition to hold onto its seats.

“I instructed that measures be considered to return something to the people, including income tax cuts,” Kishida told reporters after meeting the policy chiefs of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and its junior coalition partner Komeito late on Friday. He added he had asked for the policies to be drawn up quickly.

The move comes even as the deeply indebted country seeks ways to pay for its biggest defense expansion since World War II and vows to expand support for families to levels comparable to those provided in Sweden.

LDP tax chief Yoichi Miyazawa told reporters a period of one year would be “common sense” for such a tax cut. Komeito policy chief Yosuke Takagi said a flat rebate, irrespective of income, would be appropriate.

Polling on voting intentions shows the opposition is ahead in a race for an upper house seat on the island of Shikoku, while LDP retains a narrow lead in a lower house constituency in the southwestern prefecture of Nagasaki, according to polling by the Yomiuri newspaper and other media.

Support for Kishida’s cabinet slumped to 29% from 37% the previous month in a poll carried out by the Asahi newspaper last weekend, the lowest since he took office two years ago. A slew of other media polls have also put his approval at its lowest ever.

Voters are dissatisfied with the steps Kishida’s taken to shield them from the effects of inflation, polls have shown. Those measures include expanding and extending gasoline subsidies to the end of the year. At the same time, a poll by NHK this month showed three-quarters of respondents were uneasy about the country’s fiscal situation.