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‘Japanese First' catches on as far-right Sanseito emerges a key winner in Japan's upper house polls
The far-right Sanseito party emerged as one of the surprise winners in Japan's upper house election on Sunday, making strong gains with its anti-immigration rhetoric and populist pledges on tax cuts and welfare.
Founded during the COVID-19 pandemic and known for spreading conspiracy theories on YouTube, Sanseito gained traction with its 'Japanese First' platform, warning of a 'silent invasion' of immigrants. The party, which previously held just two seats in the 248-member upper house, is now projected to win between 10 and 22 seats, according to exit polls.
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Meanwhile, Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's ruling coalition, comprising the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and Komeito failed to retain its majority, securing only around 41 of the 125 contested seats. Broadcaster NHK projected the LDP could win between 27 and 41 seats, while Komeito may secure between five and 12.
The setback follows the coalition's earlier loss of a lower house majority in October, further weakening Ishiba's political standing.
'The phrase Japanese First was meant to express rebuilding Japanese people's livelihoods by resisting globalism. I am not saying that we should completely ban foreigners or that every foreigner should get out of Japan,' Sohei Kamiya, the party's 47-year-old leader, said in an interview with local broadcaster Nippon Television after the election.
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's Liberal Democratic Party and its coalition partner Komeito will likely lose their majority in the upper house, leaving them further beholden to opposition support following a lower house defeat in October.
'Sanseito has become the talk of the town, and particularly here in America, because of the whole populist and anti-foreign sentiment. It's more of a weakness of the LDP and Ishiba than anything else,' said Joshua Walker, head of the U.S. non-profit Japan Society.
In polling ahead of Sunday's election, 29% of voters told NHK that social security and a declining birthrate were their biggest concern. A total of 28% said they worried about rising rice prices, which have doubled in the past year. Immigration was in joint fifth place with 7% of respondents pointing to it.
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'We were criticised as being xenophobic and discriminatory. The public came to understand that the media was wrong and Sanseito was right,' Kamiya said.
Kamiya's message grabbed voters frustrated with a weak economy and currency that has lured tourists in record numbers in recent years, further driving up prices that Japanese can ill afford, political analysts say.
Japan's fast-ageing society has also seen foreign-born residents hit a record of about 3.8 million last year, though that is just 3% of the total population, a fraction of the corresponding proportion in the United States and Europe.
Learn from Trump and
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Kamiya, a former supermarket manager and English teacher, told Reuters before the election that he had drawn inspiration from US President Donald Trump's 'bold political style'.
He has also drawn comparisons with Germany's AfD and Reform UK although right-wing populist policies have yet to take root in Japan as they have in Europe and the United States.
Post-election, Kamiya said he plans to follow the example of Europe's emerging populist parties by building alliances with other small parties rather than work with an LDP administration, which has ruled for most of Japan's postwar history.
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Sanseito's focus on immigration has already shifted Japan's politics to the right. Just days before the vote, Ishiba's administration announced a new government taskforce to fight 'crimes and disorderly conduct' by foreign nationals and his party has promised a target of 'zero illegal foreigners'.
Kamiya, who won the party's first seat in 2022 after gaining notoriety for appearing to call for Japan's emperor to take concubines, has tried to tone down some controversial ideas formerly embraced by the party.
During the campaign, Kamiya, however, faced a backlash for branding gender equality policies a mistake that encourage women to work and keep them from having children.
To soften what he said was his 'hot-blooded' image and to broaden support beyond the men in their twenties and thirties that form the core of Sanseito's support, Kamiya fielded a raft of female candidates on Sunday.
Those included the single-named singer Saya, who clinched a seat in Tokyo.
Like other opposition parties Sanseito called for tax cuts and an increase in child benefits, policies that led investors to fret about Japan's fiscal health and massive debt pile, but unlike them it has a far bigger online presence from where it can attack Japan's political establishment.
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Its YouTube channel has 400,000 followers, more than any other party on the platform and three times that of the LDP, according to socialcounts.org.
Sanseito's upper house breakthrough, Kamiya said, is just the beginning.
'We are gradually increasing our numbers and living up to people's expectations. By building a solid organization and securing 50 or 60 seats, I believe our policies will finally become reality,' he said.
With inputs from agencies

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