
Japan's PM Ishiba says he will stay in office despite election loss
Mr Ishiba's ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and its junior coalition partner Komeito were three seats short of maintaining a majority in the 248-seat upper house in Sunday's vote.
Advertisement
The coalition is now a minority in both houses of the Diet, or parliament, though the LDP is still the leading party.
Japan's Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba attends a press conference at the headquarters of the Liberal Democratic Party in Tokyo (Philip Fong/Pool Photo via AP)
Mr Ishiba said he takes the result seriously but that his priority is to avoid creating a political vacuum and to tackle impending challenges, including the August 1 deadline for a tariff deal with the US.
'While I painfully feel my serious responsibility over the election results, I believe I must also fulfil my responsibility I bear for the country and the people so as not to cause politics to stall or go adrift,' Mr Ishiba said.
'Challenges such as global situation and natural disaster won't wait for a better political situation.'
Advertisement
The prime minister said he hopes to reach a mutually beneficial deal and meet with US President Donald Trump.
Sunday's vote comes after Mr Ishiba's coalition lost a majority in the October lower house election, stung by past corruption scandals, and his unpopular government has since been forced into making concessions to the opposition to get legislation through parliament.
Shigeru Ishiba, Japan's prime minister and president of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, meets the media at the LDP headquarters in Tokyo (Franck Robichon, Pool Photo via AP)
It has been unable to quickly deliver effective measures to mitigate rising prices, including Japan's traditional staple of rice, and dwindling wages.
Mr Trump has added to the pressure, complaining about a lack of progress in trade negotiations and the lack of sales of US cars and American-grown rice to Japan despite a shortfall in domestic stocks of the grain.
Advertisement
A 25% tariff due to take effect on August 1 has been another blow for Mr Ishiba.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
36 minutes ago
- Reuters
Trump says Brazil's Lula can call him anytime
WASHINGTON/BRASILIA, Aug 1 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said on Friday that Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva can call him anytime to discuss tariffs and other friction between the countries. "He can talk to me anytime he wants," Trump said of Lula, speaking to reporters at the White House. He added he was fond of the Brazilian people but "the people running Brazil did the wrong thing." Later, speaking with reporters in Brasilia, Brazil Finance Minister Fernando Haddad called Trump's remarks "great," saying he is sure Lula feels the same, and would be willing to receive a call from the U.S. president. In a post on his X account, Lula said Brazil has always been open to dialogue, although he did not mention Trump nor his earlier remarks. Trump slapped a 50% tariff on Brazil, with many exemptions, starting next week to fight what he has called a "witch hunt" against former President Jair Bolsonaro, who is on trial on charges of plotting a coup following his election loss in 2022. The U.S. also announced sanctions on a Brazilian Supreme Court justice who has been overseeing Bolsonaro's trial. Lula has rejected both the sanctions and the tariffs, calling them "unjustifiable" and an "unacceptable" interference in Brazil's justice system. Haddad said his planned virtual meeting with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent next week will pave the way for an eventual meeting between Lula and Trump, but noted such a move would require preparation. Earlier this week, Haddad said Brazil needed assurance Lula would not face the same treatment as Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who came under fire from Trump and Vice President JD Vance during a heated exchange at the White House earlier this year.


Times
2 hours ago
- Times
Trump evicts his own wife in White House ballroom blitz
Melania Trump will need to find new office space after her husband's plans take over the White House CHIP SOMODEVILLA/GETTY IMAGES It may be hard to imagine, but Donald Trump's plans for a new ballroom in the White House might be less than romantic. The list of people being evicted by the project in the building's east wing happens to include his wife. Melania will need new office space in Washington, which is a shame as her reading of the news from Ukraine has made her one of the president's more effective foreign policy advisers. In fact, there is fresh evidence of Mr Trump's need for help with foreign affairs. His administration has said 'upwards of 200 countries' contacted them about tariffs, which must be news to the US State Department as their website only lists 197 independent states. Perhaps Trump is including uninhabited Antarctic territories which he has also tariffed. Some nations may be recognising Palestine, but Trump is doing the same for penguins. Comedian Frank Skinner was pleased when the King invoked 'It's coming home' this week, because the phrase was rather absent from the Lionesses' Euros campaign. The words are from the song Skinner co-wrote for Euro '96 and he thinks politics is behind its disappearance. 'Someone who worked for the FA told me that … members from other football associations had said it is very jingoistic to suggest that England is the home of football,' Skinner said on Frank Off the Radio. Maybe, or perhaps it's because our women bring football home so regularly that they've rendered the song obsolete? 'Four years of hurt' doesn't sound too bad, but Skinner can rely on the men's team to keep topping up their hurt-o-meter. • Sarina Wiegman boogies to Burna Boy at England Euros parade in London Reshuffle fever is still untreatable in SW1A, but always be wary of such rumours. Former deputy cabinet secretary Helen MacNamara tells the Institute for Government she would 'mischievously' get tongues wagging by randomly wheeling out the reshuffle 'whiteboard' which charts who has what job. 'It used to sit in the corner of my office, shrouded in a sheet,' she said. 'I'd take the sheet off it, and somebody coming in would be like 'What's going on?'' Gossip could get out of hand. In one reshuffle, a minister was thought to be in line for a move, but returned from Downing Street with the same job, and was bemused that civil servants had taken his name off the door and packed his possessions into a box. The novelist Philip Pullman is not generating much hype for his forthcoming memoir. 'I haven't been anywhere and I've not done very much — all I've done is sit in a room and write books,' he told an event given by bookseller Waterstones and publisher Scholastic, who'll have to work on some better blurb. Pullman is marking 30 years of the His Dark Materials trilogy, and 40 years of working with his editor David Fickling. The latter was still green in publishing when he read his first Pullman manuscript. 'I've just read the most amazing book,' he told a colleague at Oxford University Press. 'What am I supposed to do now?' His colleague looked up from the dictionary he was compiling and replied: 'I think you're supposed to publish it.' The RAF has appointed Suraya Marshall to the rank of Air Vice-Marshal. This means that there are now two Marshal Marshalls in the force, as her husband Allan Marshall is Air Marshal Marshall. That's one for General Knowledge.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Why Donald Trump's tariffs take aim at Asia and your iPhones
When he began his trade war, President Donald Trump said his goal was to bring American jobs and manufacturing back to the US, reduce trade deficits and create a more level playing field for American companies competing globally. But after months of negotiations and many countries' refusal to meet America's demands, his strategy has taken a more punitive companies have been here before. Under Trump's first administration, when he imposed tariffs on Chinese exports, they scrambled to limit their exposure to Beijing, with many shifting production to Vietnam, Thailand and India to avoid higher levies. But his battery of new tariffs does not spare any of these economies. Stocks saw a sell-off, with benchmark indexes in Taiwan and South Korea in the red on Friday. Both countries are central to Asia's sprawling electronics production. The details are still hazy, but US firms from Apple to Nvidia will likely be paying more for their supply chains - they source critical components from several Asian countries and assemble devices in the they are on the hook - for iPhones, chips, batteries, and scores of other tiny components that power modern lives. It's not good news for Asian economies that have grown and become richer because of exports and foreign investment - from Japanese cars to South Korean electronics to Taiwanese chips. Soaring demand for all these goods fuelled trade surpluses with Washington over the years - and has driven President Trump's charge that Asian manufacturing has been taking American jobs away. In May, Trump told Apple CEO Tim Cook: "We put up with all the plants you built in China for years... we are not interested in you building in India, India can take care of themselves." Apple earns roughly half its revenue by selling iPhones that are manufactured in China, Vietnam and India. The tech giant reported bumper earnings for the three months to June, hours before Trump's tariff announcement on Thursday night, but now the future looks more executive Tim Cook told analysts on a conference call that tariffs had already cost Apple $800m (£600m) in the previous quarter, and may add $1.1bn in costs to the next quarter. Tech companies typically plan years ahead, but Trump's unpredictable tariff policy has paralysed businesses. Amazon's online marketplace, for instance, is just as dependent on China for what it sells in the US. But it's not yet clear what rates Chinese imports into the US could face because Beijing has yet to strike a deal with Washington - it has until 12 August to do so. Before they agreed to de-escalate, the two sides imposed tit-for-tat tariffs that reached a staggering 145% on some goods. But it's no longer just about China. On Thursday, Mr Cook said that most iPhones sold in the US now come from India. But Trump has just levelled a 25% tariff on Indian imports, after Delhi was unable to clinch a deal in time. Other firms chose to re-route their goods bound for the US through Vietnam and Thailand after the tariffs in Trump's first term. It became so common that it was called the "China+1" strategy. But this time, these trans-shipped goods are also being targeted. In fact, trans-shipping has been a big part of the US negotiations with Asian countries. Vietnamese imports face a 20% US levy but trans-shipped goods face 40%, according to Trump. It's harder still for advanced manufacturing like semiconductors - more than half of the world's chips, and most of its advanced ones, come from Taiwan. It is now subject to a 20% tariff. Chips are the backbone of Taiwan's economy, but also central to US efforts to gain a technological lead over China. So it is another US company, Nvidia, that will pay steep levies to put advanced chips by Taiwan's TSMC inside its AI products. But perhaps the biggest casualty of Trump's tariffs could well be Asia's e-commerce giants - as well as the American companies that rely on Chinese sellers and marketplaces. In a surprise move this week, Trump ditched the "de minimis" rule which exempted parcels under $800 from customs duties. He first did this in May, targeting such parcels from China and Hong Kong - and this was a blow for retailers like Shein and Temu, whose huge success has come from online sales in the West. Now American sites like eBay and Etsy have also lost that exemption - and the price of second-hand, vintage and handmade items for US customers will go up. President Trump says he is batting for Americans with these tariffs, but in a deeply globalised world, US firms and customers could also become casualties. There is still so much uncertainty that it is hard to see who the winners really are.