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Support drops but Mori stays on
TOKYO, Japan -- Beleaguered Japanese Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori has rejected calls to resign despite his support hitting the lowest rate ever. A weekend poll showed only nine percent of respondents supported Mori, the second-lowest support rate for any prime minister since the newspaper began polls in 1946. Mori, facing the biggest crisis of his 10-month rule, on Monday said he wanted to stay on to push through the budget and drive reforms in education and information technology. Mori's troubles come amid growing concern over Japan's faltering economy and tense ties with the United States after a U.S. submarine hit and sank a Japanese training trawler off Hawaii, leaving nine missing. Speculation is mounting that leaders in Mori's three-way ruling coalition will force him to step down as early as next month to improve their chances in a July election. "What I must do above all is achieve an economic recovery. And for that, I want by all means to enact the budget (for the fiscal year from April 1)," Mori told a panel in parliament.
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