Yuichiro Tamaki – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sun, 07 Sep 2025 10:10:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Yuichiro Tamaki – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Who could replace Shigeru Ishiba as Japan’s Prime Minister https://artifex.news/article70022117-ece/ Sun, 07 Sep 2025 10:10:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70022117-ece/ Read More “Who could replace Shigeru Ishiba as Japan’s Prime Minister” »

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Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said on Sunday (September 7, 2025) he would resign, caving into ruling party pressure on him to take responsibility for a series of election losses, most recently in July’s upper house.

Mr. Ishiba’s resignation will trigger a leadership race in his Liberal Democratic Party, with the winner facing a parliament vote to become Prime Minister.

Since the ruling coalition has lost its majorities in both chambers of parliament, the LDP president is no longer guaranteed to become premier. There is a slim possibility an Opposition party leader takes the helm of the world’s fourth-largest economy.

Here is a list of lawmakers who might throw their hats in the ring:

Ruling – Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)

SANAE TAKAICHI, 64:

If chosen, Ms. Takaichi would be Japan’s first female prime minister.

A party veteran who has held a variety of roles, including economic security and internal affairs minister, she lost to Ishiba in the LDP leadership race in a run-off vote last year.

File photo of Sanae Takaichi.

File photo of Sanae Takaichi.
| Photo Credit:
Reuters

Known for conservative positions such as revising the pacifist postwar constitution, Takaichi is a regular visitor to the Yasukuni shrine to honour Japan’s war dead, viewed by some Asian neighbours as a symbol of past militarism.

Takaichi stands out for her vocal opposition to the Bank of Japan’s interest rate hikes and her calls to ramp up spending to boost the fragile economy.

SHINJIRO KOIZUMI, 44:

Heir to a political dynasty with a hand in governing Japan for more than a century, Koizumi would become its youngest prime minister in the modern era.

Koizumi ran in the last year’s party leadership race, presenting himself as a reformer able to restore public trust in a scandal-hit party.

File photo of Shinjiro Koizumi.

File photo of Shinjiro Koizumi.
| Photo Credit:
Reuters

Unlike Takaichi, who left government after her defeat in that contest, the Columbia University-educated Koizumi stayed close to Ishiba as his agriculture minister, overseeing a widely publicised attempt to curb soaring rice prices.

In his only other cabinet post, as environment minister, Koizumi called for Japan to get rid of nuclear reactors in 2019. He faced ridicule that year for remarks that climate policy needed to be “cool” and “sexy”. Little is known about his views on economic policy, including on the BOJ.

YOSHIMASA HAYASHI, 64:

Hayashi has been Japan’s chief cabinet secretary, a pivotal job that includes being top government spokesperson, since December 2023 under then-premier Fumio Kishida and Ishiba.

He has held a variety of portfolios, including defence, foreign and agriculture minister, often being tapped as a pinch-hitter following an incumbent’s resignation.

File photo of Yoshimasa Hayashi.

File photo of Yoshimasa Hayashi.
| Photo Credit:
AP

A fluent English speaker, Hayashi worked for trading house Mitsui & Co, studied at the Harvard Kennedy School and was a staffer for U.S. Representative Stephen Neal and Senator William Roth Jr.

Hayashi ran for the LDP leadership race in 2012 and 2024. He has repeatedly called for respecting the BOJ’s independence on monetary policy.

Opposition – Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan

YOSHIHIKO NODA, 68:

Former Prime Minister Noda is the leader of the biggest opposition group, the centre-left Constitutional Democrats.

As premier from 2011 to 2012, he worked with the LDP to push through legislation to double Japan’s consumption tax to 10% to help curb bulging public debt – earning a reputation as a fiscal hawk. The consumption tax was raised to 10% in 2019 for most items.

File photo of Yoshihiki Noda.

File photo of Yoshihiki Noda.
| Photo Credit:
Reuters

In the upper house election in July, Noda reversed course and called for a temporary cut to the consumption tax for food items. He has repeatedly called for phasing out the BOJ’s massive stimulus.

Opposition – Democratic Party for the People

YUICHIRO TAMAKI, 56:

Tamaki’s centre-right party is one of the fastest-growing in recent elections.

A former finance ministry bureaucrat, Tamaki co-founded the Democratic Party for the People in 2018 and advocates increasing people’s take-home pay by expanding tax exemptions and slashing the consumption tax.

File photo of Yuichiro Tamaki

File photo of Yuichiro Tamaki
| Photo Credit:
Reuters

He supports boosting defence capabilities, stricter regulations for foreigners’ land acquisition and constructing more nuclear power plants.

Tamaki has called on the BOJ to be cautious about phasing out stimulus, saying it should wait until real wages turn positive and help underpin consumption.

Published – September 07, 2025 03:40 pm IST



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Key Japan Opposition Party’s Head Admits To Extra-Marital Affair https://artifex.news/yuichiro-tamaki-key-japan-opposition-partys-head-admits-to-extra-marital-affair-6991484/ Mon, 11 Nov 2024 06:14:45 +0000 https://artifex.news/yuichiro-tamaki-key-japan-opposition-partys-head-admits-to-extra-marital-affair-6991484/ Read More “Key Japan Opposition Party’s Head Admits To Extra-Marital Affair” »

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Yuichiro Tamaki, the head of the Japanese opposition party that has emerged as kingmaker as lawmakers select the next prime minister on Monday, said a tabloid report about his extra-marital affair with a model was “basically true”.

“I apologise for the trouble caused,” the Democratic Party for the People (DPP) leader told reporters at a hastily called news conference after tabloid SmartFlash reported the affair on Monday.

“The facts reported this morning are basically true,” he said.

Despite the scandal, Tamaki retained the unanimous support of the party’s lawmakers to stay on as party leader, DPP Secretary General Kazuya Shimba told reporters.

SmartFlash reported that Tamaki, 55, and a 39-year-old model and entertainer rendezvoused in July and October. It published a photo of Tamaki in a grey hoodie as he emerged from a bar, followed 20 minutes later by the woman.

“My wife had told me, ‘you can’t protect the country if you can’t protect the person closest to you.’ I will etch those words in my mind once again, reflect on my action and do my best to work in a way that is in the best interests of the country and to realise policies,” Tamaki said.

Japanese lawmakers are set to decide at a special parliamentary session on Monday whether Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba should stay as the country’s premier after his scandal-tarnished coalition lost its parliamentary majority in an election last month.

Ishiba is expected to prevail because his coalition retained the biggest block of seats in the election.

Tamaki has previously said his party members would not vote for Ishiba but could offer support to the prime minister’s Liberal Democratic Party on a policy-by-policy basis.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)




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