Japan PM plans to resign after election debacle: local media
The reports said Shigeru Ishiba had conveyed his intention to step down to those close to him, following the announcement Wednesday of a US-Japan trade deal.
Sunday's upper house election was calamitous for Ishiba's centre-right Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which has governed almost continuously since 1955.
Voters angry at inflation turned to other parties, notably the "Japanese first" Sanseito, whose "anti-globalist" drive echoes the agenda of populist movements elsewhere.
Ishiba plans to vacate the top job by the end of August, the Mainichi daily reported. The Yomiuri newspaper said he would announce his resignation in July but did not give details of when he would leave office.
These and other reports said calls for the 68-year-old to depart had grown louder within the LDP since the results of the upper house election.
But he communicated his decision after striking a trade deal with Washington that cut a threatened 25-percent tariff to 15 percent ahead of an August 1 deadline.
In the election on Sunday, the LDP and its junior partner Komeito fell three seats short of retaining a majority.
It came only months after Ishiba's coalition was forced into a minority government in the more powerful lower house, in the LDP's worst result in 15 years.
Ishiba won the party leadership in September, on his fifth try, to become the 10th LDP prime minister since 2000 -- all of them men.
Since the October snap lower house election, the ruling coalition has been forced to bargain with opposition parties to pass legislation.
After years of stagnant or falling prices, consumers in the world's fourth-largest economy have been squeezed by inflation since Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
In particular, the price of rice has doubled, while resentment has also lingered over an LDP funding scandal.
"I really hope things will get better in Japan, but the population is declining, and I think living in Japan will get tougher and tougher," Naomi Omura, an 80-year-old from Hiroshima, told AFP in Tokyo on Wednesday.
"It is disappointing that Japan cannot act more strongly" towards the United States" but "I think it was good that they agreed on a lower tariff", she said.
Tetsuo Momiyama, an 81-year-old Tokyo resident, said Ishiba "is finished already".
"It's a good timing for him to go," Momiyama said.
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