Japan's Ishiba Tries to Buy Time After Historic Election Setback
Why the Federal Reserve's Building Renovation Costs $2.5 Billion
Milan Corruption Probe Casts Shadow Over Property Boom
How San Jose's Mayor Is Working to Build an AI Capital
Ishiba on Monday vowed to remain in his job even though his LDP-led coalition finished Sunday running a government without a majority in both chambers of parliament for the first time since the party's founding seven decades ago. While it has ruled Japan for most of that period, younger voters are increasingly turning toward populist smaller parties as rising prices fuel discontent.
'The LDP is a fatigued party and it has a brand problem,' said David Boling, director at the Eurasia Group covering Japan and Asia Trade, former negotiator at the USTR. 'To be blunt I think many Japanese and many Japanese voters see it as a party of old men who are out of touch.'
Although the outcome on Sunday wasn't as bad as some of the early exit polls suggested, Ishiba still failed to clear the low bar he set of retaining a majority in the upper house. That leaves him at risk of becoming yet another footnote in the revolving door of Japanese prime ministers that only managed to last for a year or so.
For now, Ishiba can lean into the fact that he needs to stay on to negotiate a trade deal with the US to help Japan avoid a steep increase in tariffs from Donald Trump's administration. He cited those talks and other pressing issues at his briefing on Monday.
'I plan to put all of my efforts into finding a solution to the urgent issues we face, including the US tariffs, inflation, natural disasters, and the most complex and severe security environment since the war,' Ishiba said.
Still, it looks like his days are numbered — even if he has no obvious successor right now.
'We'll see in the next day or two if the dissenters are able to gather enough people to push him out, but this can't go on,' said Tobias Harris, founder of Japan Foresight, adding that none of the opposition parties want to join a coalition with him. 'It all looks like you've got a political crisis.'
Harris cited four key points a replacement would need for success: bringing back right-wing voters, appealing to a younger demographic, matching Trump at the negotiation table and rebuilding a governing coalition that can win at the ballot box. Few of the familiar names in the LDP check all four boxes, he said.
The timing of any move may depend on the success of the trade talks.
Ishiba said he wanted to speak with Trump and obtain tangible results in the negotiations soon. His long-time right-hand man Ryosei Akazawa is already on his way to Washington for an eighth attempt to gain traction with his counterparts in the US.
Among the key sticking points is the sectoral tariff on cars and auto parts that is sending profit hit shockwaves through Japan's auto sector. Within the LDP there is already unhappiness about Ishiba's relatively neutral response to Trump's abrupt letter stipulating higher across-the-board duties of 25% from the beginning of August.
'If Ishiba has no concrete results by then the voices calling for his resignation will likely get louder,' said Katsuyuki Yakushiji, professor emeritus at Toyo University and writer of multiple books on Japanese politics. He indicated that August would likely be the make-or-break month for the prime minister.
The last three LDP prime ministers who lost an upper house majority stepped down within two months, including Shinzo Abe in 2007 during his first stint as premier. Abe's departure then, may provide a rough time frame for Ishiba now. Abe lost the majority in July, tried a cabinet reshuffle in August to regain momentum then stepped down in September. That month is a common post-summer timing for the LDP to appoint and try to rally around a new leader.
At the time, Ishiba was one of the LDP's fiercest voices calling on Abe to resign unless he could justify a reason for staying on. Ishiba was reminded of this comment on Monday and said he clearly remembered asking Abe to explain himself to the public as well as the party.
Fast forward 18 years and it's Ishiba taking the heat. The same names in the news, a generation later.
The opposition gains in the election show voters are wanting something different. Ishiba is the leader the LDP chose, but he's not the choice of most members of the public. And they seek a sales tax cut to ease the pain of inflation they never asked for either.
While the Constitutional Democratic Party came second as the biggest opposition party offering to address the tax issue, many younger voters opted for the Democratic Party for the People's and its pledge of more take-home pay for working age people.
Harder conservatives drifted to Sanseito and its 'Japanese First' message, though support remained highly localized around areas with high concentrations of foreigners or as a kind of protest vote in the proportional representation segment of the election.
Former Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is among the LDP members who might check a couple of the check boxes cited by Harris, while Sanae Takaichi, the policy hawk who lost out to Ishiba in last year's party shootout, might seem an obvious choice to win back right-wingers. But both would give the impression of looking at the rear-view mirror. Takaichi would likely more look like Abenomics II, than a move forward.
Instead the party should look at younger guns such as conservative former Economic Security Minister Takayuki Kobayashi or Shinjiro Koizumi, the 'rice minister' whose quick action has helped cool prices of the nation's staple, according to Eurasia's Boling.
In Koizumi's case, he also inherits some reformist cache from his father Junichiro, a party maverick who helped re-brand the party a quarter century ago, something the party needs to do again now.
'I think that brand needs to be a face of a younger LDP member. Is that Kobayashi? Is that Koizumi?' said Boling. 'I think it's probably more Koizumi than Kobayashi.'
--With assistance from Yuko Takeo.
(Adds analyst comments.)
A Rebel Army Is Building a Rare-Earth Empire on China's Border
Elon Musk's Empire Is Creaking Under the Strain of Elon Musk
Thailand's Changing Cannabis Rules Leave Farmers in a Tough Spot
How Starbucks' CEO Plans to Tame the Rush-Hour Free-for-All
What the Tough Job Market for New College Grads Says About the Economy
©2025 Bloomberg L.P.
Hashtags

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

Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Infosys: Fiscal Q1 Earnings Snapshot
BANGALORE, India (AP) — BANGALORE, India (AP) — Infosys Limited (INFY) on Wednesday reported fiscal first-quarter profit of $809 million. The Bangalore, India-based company said it had net income of 19 cents per share. The results matched Wall Street expectations. The average estimate of five analysts surveyed by Zacks Investment Research was also for earnings of 19 cents per share. The business consulting services provider posted revenue of $4.94 billion in the period, topping Street forecasts. Four analysts surveyed by Zacks expected $4.84 billion. _____ This story was generated by Automated Insights ( using data from Zacks Investment Research. Access a Zacks stock report on INFY at Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
India's Infosys narrows annual forecast helped by banking and financial unit strength
BENGALURU (Reuters) -India's Infosys narrowed its full-year forecast on Wednesday after reporting stronger-than-expected revenue for the first quarter, driven by growth in its financial services segment. The Bengaluru-based software services company narrowed its annual revenue growth forecast to 1%–3% from a prior range of flat to 3%- in line with analyst expectations for a lift in the lower end. Consolidated sales rose 7.5% year-on-year to 422.79 billion rupees ($4.89 billion) in the June quarter, while analysts, on average, expected revenue of 418.06 billion rupees, as per data compiled by LSEG. Revenue from Infosys' banking and financial services segment rose for the fifth consecutive quarter, helped by marquee deal wins including Bank of Sydney, Metro Bank, and U.K.-based AIB. Net profit rose 8.7% in three-month period to 69.21 billion rupees. Analyst had expected 67.55 billion rupees, as per data compiled by LSEG. Analysts have said that U.S. President Donald Trump easing some tariff restrictions, along with global interest rate cuts by central banks, could boost India's $283-billion IT industry, where the banking and financial services segment contributes about a third of total revenue. Net new bookings rose $3.8 billion during the quarter, compared with $2.6 billion in the previous quarter and $4.1 billion in the year-ago period. Infosys also retained its operating margin forecast at 20-22% for FY26. Earlier this month, bellwether Tata Consultancy Services missed revenue estimates and flagged delays in decision making and project starts. Smaller rivals and Tech Mahindra fared better than large caps on account of higher deal wins and better margin. Shares listed in Mumbai closed 0.8% higher ahead of the results. ($1 = 86.3880 Indian rupees) Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Donald Trump announces trade deal with Japan
US President Donald Trump has announced a trade framework with Japan, placing a 15% tax on goods imported from that nation. 'This Deal will create Hundreds of Thousands of Jobs – There has never been anything like it,' Mr Trump posted on Truth Social, adding that the United States 'will continue to always have a great relationship with the Country of Japan'. The president said Japan would invest 'at my direction' 550 billion dollars into the US and would 'open' its economy to American cars and rice. The 15% tax on imported Japanese goods is a meaningful drop from the 25% rate that Mr Trump, in a recent letter to Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, said would be levied starting on August 1. Early Wednesday, Mr Ishiba acknowledged the new trade agreement, saying it would benefit both sides and help them work together. With the announcement, Mr Trump is seeking to tout his ability as a dealmaker — even as his tariffs, when initially announced in early April led to a market panic and fears of slower growth that for the moment appear to have subsided. Key details remained unclear from his post, such as whether Japanese-built cars would face a higher 25% tariff that Mr Trump imposed on the sector. But the framework fits a growing pattern for Mr Trump, who is eager to portray the tariffs as a win for the US. His administration says the revenues will help reduce the budget deficit and more factories will relocate to America to avoid the import taxes and cause trade imbalances to disappear. The wave of tariffs continues to be a source of uncertainty about whether it could lead to higher prices for consumers and businesses if companies simply pass along the costs. The problem was seen sharply on Tuesday after General Motors reported a 35% drop in its net income during the second quarter as it warned that tariffs would hit its business in the months ahead, causing its stock to tumble. As the August 1 deadline for the tariff rates in his letters to world leaders is approaching, Mr Trump also announced a trade framework with the Philippines that would impose a tariff of 19% on its goods, while American-made products would face no import taxes. The president also reaffirmed his 19% tariffs on Indonesia. The US ran a 69.4 billion dollar trade imbalance on goods with Japan last year, according to the Census Bureau. America had a trade imbalance of 17.9 billion dollars with Indonesia and an imbalance of 4.9 billion dollars with the Philippines. Both nations are less affluent than the US and an imbalance means America imports more from those countries than it exports to them. The president is set to impose the broad tariffs listed in his recent letters to other world leaders on August 1, raising questions of whether there will be any breakthrough in talks with the European Union. At a Tuesday dinner, Mr Trump said the EU would be in Washington on Wednesday for trade talks. 'We have Europe coming in tomorrow, the next day,' Mr Trump told guests. The president earlier this month sent a letter threatening the 27 member states in the EU with 30% taxes on their goods to be imposed starting on August 1.