Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba announced his resignation on Sunday after less than a year in office, bowing to mounting pressure from within his ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) following a series of devastating electoral defeats. The decision, which Ishiba said was made to prevent a “critical division” within the party, comes after the LDP-led coalition lost its majority in both the lower and upper houses of parliament for the first time since the party’s founding in 1955.
Ishiba, who took office in October 2024, had resisted calls for his resignation for weeks. The pressure intensified after the coalition’s historic defeat in a July upper house election, which followed a similar loss in the more powerful lower house just months earlier. The successive setbacks, fueled by public anger over rising living costs and a political fundraising scandal, stripped the government of its ability to pass legislation without opposition support, leading to a state of political paralysis.
At a news conference in Tokyo, Ishiba stated that his resignation was timed to coincide with the conclusion of difficult tariff negotiations with the United States, a matter he had called a “national crisis.” He said he felt that with this issue reaching a “significant milestone,” it was “the appropriate moment to step aside and pass the baton to the next leader.” His decision also preempted a vote on Monday to hold an early leadership election, a move that was widely seen as a no-confidence motion against him.
Ishiba’s resignation throws Japan’s political landscape into turmoil and sets the stage for a potentially messy and divisive contest to replace him as the head of the LDP. The next leader will face the daunting task of restoring public trust in the party and navigating a difficult economic environment, all while governing from a minority position. A snap lower house election to consolidate power is a possibility, but it comes with a high risk for the LDP after voters punished the party so severely in recent months.
The political instability in the world’s fourth-largest economy comes at a time of significant global upheaval. The next Japanese leader will need to address economic headwinds, fractious relations with the U.S. and a cost of living crisis at home, underscoring the gravity of the political vacuum left by Ishiba’s sudden departure.
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