logo
Sanseito, Explained: The Alarming Rise of Japan's Far-Right Movement

Sanseito, Explained: The Alarming Rise of Japan's Far-Right Movement

Tokyo Weekender17-07-2025
As Japan heads into another upper house election, an unexpected political force is gaining ground — and raising alarm bells. Sanseito, a once-obscure party known for its nationalist slogans and conspiratorial rhetoric, is polling unexpectedly high in national surveys.
In a recent
Kyodo News poll
conducted from July 5–6, the party ranked second in proportional representation support, behind only the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP). For a group that was initially dismissed as fringe, the rise is both dramatic and deeply concerning to many observers.
With rhetoric that echoes Trumpism and European ultranationalism, it has become the most talked-about — and most unsettling — dark horse in Japanese politics.
List of Contents:
What Is Sanseito?
Sohei Kamiya: Sanseito's Conspiracy-Touting Figurehead
Behind Its Sudden Rise
How Japan Is Reacting to Sanseito
Related Posts
What Is Sanseito?
Founded in early 2020, as the COVID-19 pandemic was beginning to unfold, Sanseito initially gained attention for its divisive and inflammatory rhetoric, as well as its penchant for repeating conspiracy theories. The party vehemently opposed mask mandates, PCR testing, vaccine requirements and other public health measures and was openly anti-immigration.
Its
official platform
prioritizes three pillars: education reform, health and food sovereignty and national defense. These seemingly innocuous issues conceal a far more disturbing worldview — a platform revolving around a hardline rejection of globalism and foreign influence. Under the banner of 'Japanese First,' the party pushes for sweeping immigration restrictions, strict limits on foreign land ownership and policies that frame outsiders as a threat to national security and cultural purity.
Sanseito leaders reject internationalism, certain aspects of mainstream medicine, gender equality policies and what they see as the moral decay brought on by Western liberalism. Their COVID-19 stance was an early example of this strategy — their rhetoric at the time mixed pandemic denialism, anti-vaccine messaging and claims that global elites are using medicine and processed food to weaken Japan.
Sohei Kamiya: Sanseito's Conspiracy-Touting Figurehead
Like many nascent far-right movements, Sanseito has a charismatic figurehead known for divisive and conspiratorial outbursts: Sohei Kamiya, who was elected to the Diet's upper house, the House of Councillors, in 2022 on the party's proportional representation ticket. In the past few years, he's
blamed
gender equality for Japan's birthrate,
dismissed
older women as biologically irrelevant and
spewed
blatant anti-Semitism, to name a few.
Before emerging as the head of Sanseito, Kamiya had a brief and largely unremarkable stint in mainstream politics, including a term on the city council for Suita, which is located in Osaka Prefecture, and an unsuccessful run as an LDP candidate in 2012. After his failed candidacy, he created a YouTube channel called Channel Grand Strategy, which quickly gained a following for its hardline nationalist content and conspiratorial tone.
Through his channel, Kamiya positioned himself as a bold truth-teller railing against globalization, feminism, foreign influence and Japan's political elite. By 2020, he had amassed thousands of followers — followers who would become supporters when he and a group of fellow right-wingers formally founded Sanseito in April 2020.
From the outset, Sanseito leaned heavily on YouTube and social media. This remains a core part of its strategy and appeal. The party's online presence serves as both a megaphone and a funnel: Free videos and livestreams draw in viewers with health tips, anti-vaccine rhetoric and nationalist talking points, but the 'real truth' is always said to be hidden behind paywalls. Followers are encouraged to become paying members — at rates far higher than those of traditional Japanese parties — in order to access members-only content, daily updates, regional chat groups and even 'leadership training.' While the Liberal Democratic Party charges around ¥4,000 for a year, Sanseito demands ¥1,000 per month for regular membership and ¥2,500 for premium access.
This model accomplishes two things simultaneously. First, it creates a tight-knit ideological echo chamber, giving members a sense of belonging and insider knowledge while isolating them from outside criticism. Second, it generates significant revenue. These membership fees, multiplied across tens of thousands of recruits, have built a war chest that outpaces even established parties, all while maintaining the illusion of grassroots legitimacy.
Behind Its Sudden Rise
There are several factors behind the rise of Sanseito, many of them familiar-feeling to those who've watched far-right movements mobilize overseas. For decades, Japan's stagnant wages, aging population and growing inequality have bred quiet despair. Conventional parties like the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the Constitutional Democratic Party (CDP) are widely viewed as corrupt, stale and incapable of offering real change. Into this void stepped Sanseito.
According to international political analyst
Yuya Watase
, a Sanseito founding member who left the party after becoming disillusioned with its policies, the party's success stems from doing what no other party in Japan bothers to do: actually building a membership base.
In essence, Sanseito mirrors the populist playbooks seen elsewhere: Trump's Republican Party, Brexit-era UKIP and France's National Rally. The ideological content varies, but the mechanics — direct communication, emotional narrative and institutional distrust — are strikingly similar.
How Japan Is Reacting to Sanseito
Sanseito's rise has triggered a wave of nervousness across Japan. Eight major human rights NGOs, including Solidarity Network with Migrants Japan,
issued
a joint statement condemning Sanseito's slogan 'Japanese First' as hate speech. The statement warned that exclusivist politics, which view 'foreign nationals and people of foreign origin as enemies,' are rapidly spreading through society. Over 260 signatories have since signed in solidarity. Public pushback is growing in more creative forms, too. In Shinjuku, activists recently held a protest '
rave against racism
,' where chants of 'don't vote for Sanseito!' rose from the crowd.
For now, Sanseito's presence is limited: As of July 2025, it holds just two seats in the 248-member House of Councillors, three in the 465-member House of Representatives and three in the 127-member Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly. Its influence, however, is outsized. The party has shown it doesn't need major representation to shape the political conversation and has, indeed, seen over 140 members elected to prefectural and municipal assemblies.
The threat isn't that Sanseito will take control of the Diet overnight; it's that the party is gradually redrawing the boundaries of what's politically acceptable — what can be said, proposed and believed. Its real impact lies in the way its worldview bleeds into the mainstream. And this isn't just about one party. Sanseito didn't emerge in isolation, and its rise may embolden members of larger parties to echo more hardline, nationalist positions. Already, we've seen a shift: mainstream politicians hardening their stance on immigration, leaning into rhetoric around 'traditional values' and 'Japanese uniqueness.' What once sounded fringe is becoming part of the debate.
Japan is not immune to the forces behind Trumpism, Brexit or the rise of Le Pen. Sanseito is a reflection of that. The question now is whether Japan's civil society, media and institutions are ready to respond before these shifts become entrenched.
Related Posts
Why Japanese Leftists Are Using Melonpan to Mock Sanseito
Sanseito Leader Says 'Japanese First Approach Is Not Based on Xenophobia'
Japanese Government Launches New Office To Deal With Unruly Foreigners
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Could Meet in Person with Putin as Soon as Next Week, White House Official Says
Trump Could Meet in Person with Putin as Soon as Next Week, White House Official Says

Yomiuri Shimbun

time31 minutes ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

Trump Could Meet in Person with Putin as Soon as Next Week, White House Official Says

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump could meet in person with Russian President Vladimir Putin as soon as next week as he seeks to broker an end to the Russia-Ukraine war, a White House official said Wednesday. The official cautioned that a meeting has not been scheduled yet and no location has been determined. The official was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity to discuss internal plans. The White House said Trump was also open to a meeting with both Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. A meeting between Putin and Trump would be their first since Trump returned to office this year. It would be a significant milestone in the 3-year-old war, though there's no promise such a meeting would lead to the end of the fighting since Russia and Ukraine remain far apart on their demands. Trump, appearing before reporters later at the White House, didn't answer questions about a potential location for a meeting but when asked about a summit with Putin and Zelenskyy, said 'there's a very good prospect that they will' meet. The president declined to predict how close he was to reaching a deal to end the fighting, saying, 'I've been disappointed before with this one.' Rubio lowers expectations for a meeting Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who was asked in an interview on Fox Business about a potential Trump-Putin meeting, said 'a lot has to happen before that can occur.' Rubio said the U.S. would be having talks with its European allies and the Ukrainians over the next few days. He said Trump meeting directly with the leaders of Russia and Ukraine would help close an agreement, but said, 'We've got to get close enough to that point so that a meeting like that will be productive and worth doing.' 'Today was a good day, but we've got a lot of work ahead,' he said. 'There's still many impediments to overcome.' News of a potential meeting with Putin, which was first reported by The New York Times, came hours after Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff met with Putin in Moscow. Trump had posted earlier on Truth Social that Witkoff 'had a highly productive meeting' with Putin in which 'great progress was made.' Zelenskyy has been willing to meet face-to-face with Putin to end the conflict, but Russia has repeatedly rejected the idea. Trump has met with Zelenskyy several times this year, including a contentious February meeting in Washington. Though he has not yet met with Putin this year, Trump met with him five times during his first term. Trump said earlier Wednesday that he had updated America's allies in Europe and that they would work toward an end to the war 'in the days and weeks to come.' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement that the 'Russians had expressed their desire' to meet with Trump. The Kremlin has not yet commented on any potential meetings with Trump. Witkoff met with Putin days before the White House's deadline for Russia to reach a peace deal with Ukraine or potentially face severe economic penalties that could also hit countries buying its oil. The meeting between Putin and Witkoff lasted about three hours, the Kremlin said. Putin's foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov said Putin and Witkoff had a 'useful and constructive conversation' that focused on the Ukrainian crisis and, in a nod toward improving relations between Washington and Moscow, 'prospects for possible development of strategic cooperation' between the United States and Russia. The threat of US sanctions Earlier on Wednesday, the same White House official said the U.S. was still expected to impose secondary sanctions against Russia on Friday, after a 10-day deadline that Trump imposed is to expire. The White House has not yet released details about the sanctions. Washington has threatened 'severe tariffs' and other economic penalties if the killing doesn't stop. Trump also has threatened to slap tariffs on nations that buy Russian oil, which could increase import taxes dramatically on China and India. He said Tuesday he hadn't publicly committed to any particular tariff rate, and indicated that his decision could depend on an outcome of the meeting with Putin. Trump has expressed increasing frustration with Putin over Russia's escalating strikes on civilian areas of Ukraine, intended to erode morale and public appetite for the war. The intensified attacks have occurred even as Trump has urged the Russian leader in recent months to relent. Zelenskyy said Wednesday evening that he and Trump spoke on the phone after Witkoff met with Putin. He said 'European leaders also participated in the conversation,' and 'we discussed what was said in Moscow.' 'It seems that Russia is now more inclined to agree to a ceasefire,' Zelenskyy said, adding that the pressure on Moscow 'is working,' without elaborating. Zelenskyy stressed it was important to make sure Russia does not 'deceive us or the United States' when it comes to 'the details' of a potential agreement. Kyiv proposes that Ukraine and its allies soon 'talk to determine our position, our common position, and our common view.' The fighting grinds on Overnight from Tuesday to Wednesday, Russian forces hit a recreational center in Ukraine's southern Zaporizhzhia region, killing two people and injuring 12, including two children, regional Gov. Ivan Fedorov said Wednesday. Russian forces launched at least four strikes on the area and initially attacked with powerful glide bombs. 'There is zero military sense in this strike. Only cruelty to intimidate,' Zelenskyy said in a post on Telegram. Russia also struck the Ukrainian power grid and facilities for heating and cooking gas, Zelenskyy said, as Ukraine makes preparations for winter. Western analysts and Ukrainian officials say Putin is stalling for time and avoiding serious negotiations while Russian forces push to capture more Ukraine land. A Russian offensive that started in the spring and is expected to continue through the fall is advancing faster than last year's push but is making only slow and costly gains and has been unable to take any major cities. The situation on the front line is critical for Ukrainian forces but defenses are not about to collapse, analysts say. Risks of more pressure Stepping up diplomatic and economic pressure on the Kremlin risks stoking international tensions amid worsening Russia-U.S. relations. Putin has given no hint that he might be ready to make concessions. Instead, the Russian leader and senior Kremlin officials have talked up the country's military strength. Putin announced last week that Russia's new hypersonic missile, which he says cannot be intercepted by current NATO air defense systems, has entered service. Russia announced Tuesday that it no longer regards itself as bound by a self-imposed moratorium on the deployment of nuclear-capable intermediate range missiles, a warning that potentially sets the stage for a new arms race. Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, meantime, warned that the Ukraine war could bring Russia and the U.S. into armed conflict. Trump responded to that by ordering the repositioning of two U.S. nuclear submarines. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Monday welcomed Witkoff's visit. 'We consider (talks with Witkoff) important, substantive and very useful,' he said. Trump initially gave Moscow a 50-day deadline, but later moved up his ultimatum as the Kremlin continued to bomb Ukrainian cities.

Trump Plans 100% Tariff on Computer Chips, Unless Companies Build in US
Trump Plans 100% Tariff on Computer Chips, Unless Companies Build in US

Yomiuri Shimbun

time31 minutes ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

Trump Plans 100% Tariff on Computer Chips, Unless Companies Build in US

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he will impose a 100% tariff on computer chips, raising the specter of higher prices for electronics, autos, household appliances and other essential products dependent on the processors powering the digital age. 'We'll be putting a tariff of approximately 100% on chips and semiconductors,' Trump said in the Oval Office while meeting with Apple CEO Tim Cook. 'But if you're building in the United States of America, there's no charge.' The announcement came more than three months after Trump temporarily exempted most electronics from his administration's most onerous tariffs. The Republican president said companies that make computer chips in the U.S. would be spared the import tax. During the COVID-19 pandemic, a shortage of computer chips increased the price of autos and contributed to higher inflation. Investors seemed to interpret the potential tariff exemptions as a positive for Apple and other major tech companies that have been making huge financial commitments to manufacture more chips and other components in the U.S.. Big Tech already has made collective commitments to invest about $1.5 trillion in the U.S. since Trump moved back into the White House in January. That figure includes a $600 billion promise from Apple after the iPhone maker boosted its commitment by tacking another $100 billion on to a previous commitment made in February. Now the question is whether the deal brokered between Cook and Trump will be enough to insulate the millions of iPhones made in China and India from the tariffs that the administration has already imposed and reduce the pressure on the company to raise prices on the new models expected to be unveiled next month. Wall Street certainly seems to think so. After Apple's stock price gained 5% in Wednesday regular trading sessions, the shares rose by another 3% in extended trading after Trump announced some tech companies won't be hit with the latest tariffs while Cook stood alongside him. The shares of AI chipmaker Nvidia, which also has recently made big commitments to the U.S., rose slightly in extended trading to add to the $1 trillion gain in market value the Silicon Valley company has made since the start of Trump's second administration. The stock price of computer chip pioneer Intel, which has fallen on hard times, also climbed in extended trading. Inquiries sent to chip makers Nvidia and Intel were not immediately answered. The chip industry's main trade group, the Semiconductor Industry Association, declined to comment on Trump's latest tariffs. Demand for computer chips has been climbing worldwide, with sales increasing 19.6% in the year-ended in June, according to the World Semiconductor Trade Statistics organization. Trump's tariff threats mark a significant break from existing plans to revive computer chip production in the U.S. that were drawn up during the administration of President Joe Biden. Since taking over from Biden, Trump has been deploying tariffs to incentivize more domestic production. Essentially, the president is betting that the threat of dramatically higher chip costs would force most companies to open factories domestically, despite the risk that tariffs could squeeze corporate profits and push up prices for mobile phones, TVs and refrigerators. By contrast, the bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act that Biden signed into law in 2022 provided more than $50 billion to support new computer chip plants, fund research and train workers for the industry. The mix of funding support, tax credits and other financial incentives were meant to draw in private investment, a strategy that Trump has vocally opposed.

US says 15% country-specific tariff for Japan is not ceiling
US says 15% country-specific tariff for Japan is not ceiling

The Mainichi

timean hour ago

  • The Mainichi

US says 15% country-specific tariff for Japan is not ceiling

WASHINGTON (Kyodo) -- A White House official said Wednesday that imports from Japan already subject to tariffs of 15 percent or higher will still face an additional "reciprocal" duty of 15 percent set for the country, unlike in the case of the European Union. In clear contrast to Japan's explanation of the terms of a recent bilateral trade deal, the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the key U.S. ally will not be given such special treatment. The official's confirmation to Kyodo News came just hours before U.S. President Donald Trump's country-specific tariffs ranging from 10 percent to 41 percent are set to take effect, a week after their original start date. Although Trump has insisted that his "America First" trade policies are revitalizing U.S. industries, the new rates of his so-called reciprocal tariffs are expected to cost the average U.S. household about $2,400 this year, according to estimates from the Yale Budget Lab. The non-partisan research group's calculations also found that the overall average effective tariff rate on imports to the world's largest economy will reach 18.3 percent, the highest since 1934. Trump, who has shown no sign of easing pressure on businesses to manufacture in the United States, told reporters in the Oval Office on Wednesday evening that he will impose a tariff of about 100 percent on semiconductor imports. Among major trading partners with which the United States runs trade deficits, Japan is one of the few that managed to reach a deal before the Aug. 1 expiration of Trump's monthslong pause on country-specific tariffs. But the White House official's statement suggested that the terms of the deal are being interpreted differently by Japan and the United States. Under the deal, the Trump administration committed to lowering the tariff rate on Japanese goods, due to take effect on Thursday, to 15 percent from a threatened 25 percent. Since July 22, when the two countries reached a compromise, Japanese officials have explained that beef exports from Japan, for example, would continue to be taxed at 26.4 percent as before, without the new 15 percent tariff being imposed. Formal U.S. documents, including an executive order signed last week by Trump to modify tariff rates for dozens of countries, mention the "no stacking" condition only for the European Union, which reached a similar trade deal with the administration a few days after Japan. Given the absence of a written agreement between Japan and the United States, Japanese opposition lawmakers have accused the government of failing to minimize the risk of differing interpretations of tariff implementation between the two countries. Japan's chief tariff negotiator Ryosei Akazawa arrived in Washington on Tuesday night to ensure the United States honors the terms of the bilateral deal. Akazawa has repeatedly said he confirmed with the United States that there were "no discrepancies" in their understanding of the verbal accord between the two countries. On Wednesday, Akazawa held talks with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, urging him to implement as early as possible an agreed tariff cut on Japanese car and auto part imports, according to the Japanese government. During the meeting, which lasted about 90 minutes, Akazawa and Lutnick confirmed the importance of the bilateral deal and efforts to steadily carry out initiatives that serve the "interests of both countries," the government said. Akazawa struck the trade deal with Trump during his last visit to Washington, with the U.S. president also agreeing to cut auto tariffs to 15 percent for Japan in exchange for a promise of massive investment in the United States. However, unlike the country-specific tariff rate, it remains unclear when the Trump administration plans to implement the lowered auto tariffs. Akazawa, Japan's minister for economic revitalization, is scheduled to stay in the U.S. capital through Friday and may also hold talks with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. (By Takuya Karube)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store