Shinzo Abe – Japan’s longest-serving Prime Minister
Tokyo, July 8
Meet Shinzo Abe, the longest-serving prime minister of Japan.
Abe was born in 1954 and graduated from Seikei University in 1977. He worked in Japan's leading steel manufacturer Kobe Steel in 1979, Xinhua news agency reported.
In 1982, Abe served as an assistant to the minister of foreign affairs. He has since been elected to the House of Representatives nine times starting from 1993.
He also once served as director of the Social Affairs Division of the LDP, deputy chief Cabinet secretary, secretary general of the LDP, and chief Cabinet secretary.
Abe was Japan's prime minister from 2006 to 2007, and again from 2012 to 2020.
During his first tenure as prime minister, Abe abruptly stepped down from his post in 2007 due to chronic ulcerative colitis, an intestinal disease.
After a landslide victory in the lower house election in 2012, he returned to serve as the nation's prime minister.
He was re-elected president of the LDP in September 2018.
On August 24, 2020, Abe became Japan's longest-serving prime minister by number of consecutive days in office.
He announced on August 28, 2020 that he would step down from his post due to health concerns.
Abe had been married.
--IANS