Japan PM Ishiba Defiant After Ruling Coalition Suffers Major Election Setback

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Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has vowed to remain in office despite a major electoral blow that saw his ruling coalition lose its majority in the upper house of parliament.

Sunday’s election delivered a harsh verdict to Ishiba’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and its junior partner Komeito, with public frustration growing over rising living costs, political scandals, and tense US-Japan trade negotiations.

The coalition secured only 47 of the 50 seats needed to maintain control of the 248-seat chamber, further weakening its influence after already losing its majority in the more powerful lower house last year.

“I solemnly accept the harsh result,” Ishiba said after the polls closed, but insisted his focus would remain on economic and trade challenges, signaling no intention to resign.

Analysts suggest Ishiba’s leadership may be on borrowed time. The last three LDP prime ministers who lost an upper house majority stepped down within two months.

A Fractured Conservative Base

Political observers note that Ishiba’s relatively moderate stance has alienated parts of the LDP’s conservative base. Right-wing support has drifted toward the fringe Sanseito party, which surged from one to 14 seats on a platform of anti-immigration, nationalist rhetoric, and conspiracy theories.

“Many see Ishiba as not nationalistic enough compared to former PM Shinzo Abe,” said Dr. Jeffrey Hall of Kanda University. “The Sanseito party is filling that void with extreme messaging that was once considered off-limits.”

Public Discontent and Rising Pressure

Ishiba’s government faces deepening public frustration amid an ongoing cost-of-living crisis, especially over rice prices and a perceived failure to rein in inflation. A spate of LDP-linked scandals has further damaged public trust.

The prime minister recently announced a new task force targeting crimes and “nuisance behaviours” by foreign nationals—a move seen by some as pandering to growing nationalist sentiment.

The Tokyo Stock Exchange was closed on Monday due to a public holiday, but the yen strengthened in global markets, signaling that investors had anticipated the election results.

With leadership speculation mounting, possible successors within the LDP include Sanae Takaichi, Takayuki Kobayashi, and Shinjiro Koizumi, each with their own vision for Japan’s future.

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