TOKYO — The governing party of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi secured a sweeping majority in a key parliamentary election on Sunday, Japanese media reported, citing preliminary results.
Takaichi, who assumed office four months ago, said in a televised interview with public television network NHK she is now ready to pursue her policies.
NHK, citing results of early vote counts, said that Takaichi’s Liberal Democratic Party, or LDP, had secured 271 seats, surpassing the 261-seat majority in the 465-member lower house, the more powerful of Japan’s two-chamber parliament.
A smiling Takaichi placed a big red ribbon above each winner’s name on a signboard at the LDP’s headquarters, as accompanying party executives applauded.
Despite the lack of a majority in the upper house, the huge jump from the preelection share in the more powerful lower house would allow Takaichi to make progress on a right-wing agenda that aims to boost Japan’s economy and military capabilities as tensions grow with China and she tries to nurture ties with the United States.
Takaichi said she would firmly push forward her policy goals while trying to gain support from the opposition.
“I will be flexible,” she said.
Takaichi is hugely popular, but the governing LDP, which has ruled Japan for most of the last seven decades, has struggled with funding and religious scandals in recent years. She called Sunday’s early election after only three months in office, hoping to turn that around while her popularity is high.
Popular leader
The ultraconservative Takaichi, who took office as Japan’s first female leader in October, pledged to “work, work, work,” and her style, which is seen as both playful and tough, has resonated with younger fans who say they weren’t previously interested in politics.
The opposition, despite the formation of a new centrist alliance and a rising far-right, was too splintered to pose a real challenge. The new opposition alliance of LDP’s former coalition partner, Buddhist-backed dovish Komeito, and the liberal-leaning Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan is projected to sink to half of their combined preelection share of 167 seats.
Takaichi was betting that her LDP party, together with its new partner, the Japan Innovation Party, would secure a majority.
Takaichi’s policies
The prime minister wants to push forward a significant shift to the right in Japan’s security, immigration and other policies. The LDP’s right-wing partner, JIP leader Hirofumi Yoshimura, has said his party will serve as an “accelerator” for this push.
Japan has recently seen far-right populists gain ground, such as the anti-globalist and surging nationalist party Sanseito. Exit polls projected a big gain for Sanseito.
Takaichi has pledged to revise security and defense policies by December to bolster Japan’s offensive military capabilities, lifting a ban on weapons exports and moving further away from the country’s postwar pacifist principles.
She has been pushing for tougher policies on foreigners, anti-espionage and other measures that resonate with a far-right audience, but ones that experts say could undermine civil rights.
Takaichi also wants to increase defense spending in response to President Trump’s pressure to do so.
She now has time to work on these policies, without an election until 2028.
Divisive policies
Though Takaichi said she was seeking to win support for policies seen as divisive in Japan, she largely avoided discussing ways to fund soaring military spending, how to address diplomatic tension with China and other issues.
In her campaign speeches, Takaichi enthusiastically talked about the need for proactive government spending to fund “crisis management investment and growth,” such as measures to strengthen economic security, technology and other industries. Takaichi also seeks to push tougher measures on immigration, including stricter requirements for foreign property owners and a cap on foreign residents.
Sunday’s election “underscores a problematic trend in Japanese politics in which political survival takes priority over substantive policy outcomes,” said Masato Kamikubo, a Ritsumeikan University politics professor. “Whenever the government attempts necessary but unpopular reforms … the next election looms.”
Voter optimism
Sunday’s vote coincided with fresh snowfall across the country, including in Tokyo. Record snowfall in northern Japan over the last few weeks blocked roads and was blamed for dozens of deaths nationwide.
Kazuki Ishihara, 54, said she voted for the LDP for stability and in hopes for something new under Takaichi.
“I have some hope that she could do something” her predecessors could not, Ishihara said.
Yamaguchi and Klug write for the Associated Press. AP writer Mayuko Ono contributed to this report.
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