- Text
Japan's PM under pressure to resign over crisis
Disaster in Japan
- Japan earthquake: before and after
- Search and Rescue in Japan
- Quake, tsunami slam Japan
- Okla. man helps Japanese islanders to fish again
- Sister city to the rescue
- Complete Coverage »
Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan speaks before press at his office in Tokyo on May 6, 2011. (YOSHIKAZU TSUNO/AFP/Getty Images)
TOKYO Japan's embattled prime minister said Thursday that he will consider resigning once efforts to recover from the country's triple disasters takes hold.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan, facing a no-confidence vote in parliament later Thursday, told members of his deeply divided party that he feels it is his duty to carry on leading the recovery.
"Once the post-quake reconstruction efforts are settled, I will pass on my responsibility to younger generations," he said. "The nuclear crisis is ongoing, and I will make my utmost efforts to end the crisis and move forward with post-quake reconstruction works."
Complete coverage: Disaster in Japan
Kan, who became prime minister just a year ago, has been criticized for delays in construction of temporary housing for evacuees from the March 11 disaster, lack of transparency about evacuation information, and a perceived lack of leadership.
On Wednesday, the largest opposition group, the Liberal Democratic Party, submitted the no-confidence motion along with two smaller opposition groups.
Although his Democratic Party of Japan controls the powerful lower house of parliament, where the no-confidence motion was submitted, dozens of ruling party lawmakers have expressed concern with his leadership, creating a deep rift.
The vote was expected to be very close. One of the top powerbrokers in Kan's party announced Wednesday he was going to support the opposition motion, a major blow to Kan.
The motion and the ruling party split have further complicated Kan's efforts to unite the government behind his reconstruction plans, which involve a huge injection of funds and possibly tax increases.
March's magnitude 9.0 quake and the massive tsunami that followed damaged the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, causing the worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl in 1986, and left 24,000 people are dead or missing. Another 80,000 residents have been forced to evacuate towns contaminated by the radiation-leaking plant.
In the 1990s, Kan was a crusading health minister who stood up to his own bureaucracy to lift the lid on a horrific AIDS scandal, but he was seen as an uninspiring prime minister even before the earthquake with a popularity rating below 20 percent.
He emerged as prime minister last June only after other leaders of his Democratic Party resigned. He already is Japan's fifth leader in four years.
- "Don't shoot": Qaddafi's last moments
- Libyan officials: Qaddafi killed in Sirte
- GRAPHIC VIDEO: Qaddafi's bloody body
- GRAPHIC VIDEO: Qaddafi wounded but alive
- GRAPHIC VIDEO: Chinese girl hit by truck, ignored by passers-by
- After toddler is left to die, China disquieted
- Clinton sees Qaddafi news on BlackBerry
- With warped vision, Qaddafi maddened Libya, West
- Rare Viking burial site found in Scotland
- Violence erupts amid massive Greece strike
- 23 women convicted of child pornography in Sweden
- Backpack drone a "magic bullet" for U.S. troops?
- Cockpit error sent 737 into Pacific nose dive
- Austrian women allege mass rapes at foster home
- Qaddafi hometown falls to Libya fighters
- Qaddafi reported dead
- Israelis 'shocked' at Egypt TV Schalit interview
- Poland still wants euro, central bank head says
- Poland still wants euro, central bank head says
- Japan Cabinet OKs $158 billion extra budget
- Fed threat gets results as Calif pot shops close
on Facebook
- The death of Muammar Qaddafi
- Preview: Steve Jobs
- Qaddafi dead after Sirte battle, PM confirms
- America's new favorite team: Wounded Warriors
- "Don't shoot": Qaddafi's last moments
on CBS News