The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 01, 2025
Today: April 01, 2025

Japan plunged into political uncertainty after voters deliver dramatic defeat to longtime ruling party

Japan's ruling party set to lose long-standing majority in major blow to new PM
October 27, 2024

(CNN) โ€” Japanese voters delivered a stinging rebuke to the countryโ€™s longtime ruling party in elections Sunday, plunging the worldโ€™s fourth largest economy into a rare period of political uncertainty.

Japanโ€™s Liberal Democratic Party, which has governed almost continuously since 1955, has lost its parliamentary majority in the powerful lower house for the first time in 15 years.

Public anger and distrust in the government had been growing over rising living costs, inflation and a massive political funding scandal at the heart of the LDP, with voters voicing their discontent at the ballot box.

Japan plunged into political uncertainty after voters deliver dramatic defeat to longtime ruling party
Election officers count ballots for the general election at a ballot counting centre in Tokyo on Sunday.

The LDP and its coalition partner Komeito secured just 215 of the House of Representativesโ€™ 465 seats, short of the 233 needed to reach a majority, according to public broadcaster NHK.

The result is a major blow to freshly minted Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, whose gamble to call a snap election to bolster his position after taking office only this month dramatically backfired.

Ishiba said Monday that voters had delivered an โ€œextremely harsh judgementโ€ his party must take โ€œseriously and solemnly,โ€ but also indicated he would not step down as prime minister.

โ€œI myself will also go back to the start and promote severe internal reforms within the party and further drastic reforms regarding the political situation,โ€ he said.

Ishiba said the party did not have a coalition in mind to put forward to govern but it will begin by โ€œdiscussing each of the partyโ€™s policies.โ€

Elections for Japanโ€™s lower house are usually a foregone conclusion, with the conservative LDP dominating the countryโ€™s post-World War II political scene.

Now, itโ€™s unclear who will govern Japan as Ishiba, a former defense minister and political veteran, may struggle to form a government.

Ahead of the elections, the LDP and its junior coalition partner Komeito had a stable majority of 279 seats while the LDP alone had 247. On Sunday, the LDP won just 191 seats โ€“ its worst result since 2009, when the party suffered its biggest defeat and was forced to hand control to an opposition party.

To remain in power, the LDP could try and bring other parties into its coalition or rule via a minority government, with both options putting Ishibaโ€™s position as prime minister in jeopardy.

The main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (CDPJ) won 148 seats, a significant increase from 98. CDPJ leader Yoshihiko Noda said in a press conference Sunday, โ€œOur goal was to break the ruling partyโ€™s majority, and we achieved it, which is a great accomplishment.โ€

Fresh setback

Before the election, the LDP faced falling approval ratings and public discontent over one of the countryโ€™s biggest political scandals in decades. Families and households are facing increased financial burdens, which have been exacerbated by the weak yen, a sluggish economy and high inflation.

The funding scandal involved millions of dollars in undocumented political funds, with some factions in the party accused of paying lawmakers with the proceeds of fundraising sales as kickbacks, or failing to properly declare their income.

Former Prime Minister Fumio Kishida tried to contain the damage by replacing several cabinet ministers and dissolving LDP factions, essentially coalitions within the party. But he faced calls to resign and announced in August that he would not run for a second term.

Ishiba reportedly said he would not officially endorse some party lawmakers caught up in the scandal, but they were allowed to run as independents.

The Prime Minister has also appeared to backtrack on a number of positions since becoming LDP president. He had supported legislation that could allow married women to keep their maiden names, but later said it called for โ€œfurther discussion,โ€ according to Kyodo News.

As defense minister, Ishiba was strong on deterrence as a security issue. Before the election, he proposed an Asian version of the NATO security bloc, an idea he has apparently dropped after it was rebuffed by the US.

Ishiba has also pledged financial help to low-income households, a higher minimum wage, and regional revitalization, according to Reuters. He promised a โ€œfull exitโ€ from Japanโ€™s high inflation rates, vowing to achieve โ€œgrowth in real wages.โ€

Japanโ€™s elections come just over a week before the United States votes for a new President. Ishiba has made strengthening Japanโ€™s relations with the US a priority and seeks deeper ties with allies amid growing security challenges in Asia, including an increasingly assertive China and belligerent North Korea.

Partnership with Japan has long been central to US strategy in the Asia-Pacific region, and Ishibaโ€™s predecessor Kishida this year expanded Japanโ€™s defense cooperation with its key ally. Ishiba has called for a more balanced relationship, including having greater oversight of US military bases in Japan, Reuters reported.

On Monday, Ishiba told reporters Japan โ€œwill strengthen our ties with the United States even moreโ€ and maintain the โ€œextremely good Japan-US relationship and work to strengthen the free and open international order.โ€

In a political culture that prizes conformity, Ishiba has long been something of an outlier, willing to criticize and go against his own party. That willingness to speak out has made him powerful enemies within the LDP but endeared him to more grassroots members and the public.

Now, the jockeying for power will kick off with all parties seeking alliances to secure enough seats to form a government.

Ishiba and the LDPโ€™s political future is uncertain, and one of the worldโ€™s most important economies faces a period of instability until upper house elections next summer.

This story has been updated with additional information.

The-CNN-Wire
โ„ข & ยฉ 2024 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Related Articles

US Feb PCE prices index shows inflation picture still a conundrum RBI to cut rates again on April 9, then just once more in August UK government plugs hole in finances as 2025 growth forecast is halved to 1% Euro drops to three-week low before auto tariff announcement
Share This

Popular

Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

Stock market today: More swerves hit Wall Street as Trump's "Liberation Day" nears

Stock market today: More swerves hit Wall Street as Trump's "Liberation Day" nears
Asia|MidEast|Political|US|World

Melania Trump says courage is 'based in love' as she honors women from around the world for bravery

Melania Trump says courage is 'based in love' as she honors women from around the world for bravery
Asia|World

Survivors still being found from Myanmar earthquake, but hopes begin to fade as deaths exceed 2,700

Survivors still being found from Myanmar earthquake, but hopes begin to fade as deaths exceed 2,700
Asia|Political|World

Myanmar rebel alliance declares unilateral ceasefire to support quake response

Myanmar rebel alliance declares unilateral ceasefire to support quake response

Asia

Asia|Health|Political|World

UN urges aid to Myanmar quake survivors before monsoons hit, death toll climbs towards 3,000

UN urges aid to Myanmar quake survivors before monsoons hit, death toll climbs towards 3,000
Asia|Science

Archaeologists unearthed a cache of stone tools. Neanderthals may have made them, study finds

Archaeologists unearthed a cache of stone tools. Neanderthals may have made them, study finds
Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets

Stocks edge higher, gold soars with Trump tariffs in view

Stocks edge higher, gold soars with Trump tariffs in view
Asia|Business|Economy

Chinese automakers Dongfeng Motor and Changan Auto hold merger talks, NYT reports

Chinese automakers Dongfeng Motor and Changan Auto hold merger talks, NYT reports

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In