Latest news with #MayuUshida


The Mainichi
20-07-2025
- Politics
- The Mainichi
Ex-NHK announcer Ushida projected to win in Japan upper house race
TOKYO -- Mayu Ushida, a former NHK announcer and political newcomer, is projected to win a seat in the Tokyo constituency in the July 20 House of Councillors election. The Democratic Party for the People (DPFP) fielded two candidates in the Tokyo electoral district, where six seats were contested and one vacancy was to be filled. DPFP leader Yuichiro Tamaki and other party executives campaigned vigorously to win the party's first seat in this constituency. Ushida was officially endorsed by the DPFP in April. She admitted at the time, "There were so many things I didn't know about the Public Offices Election Act, and I was at a loss over whom to ask." Despite being an obviously inexperienced candidate, she capitalized on the momentum from the DPFP's success in the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly election in June, where the party's seats increased from zero to nine. (Japanese original by Minhyang Hong, Tokyo Bureau, and Makoto Kakizaki, Tokyo City News Department)


Japan Times
18-07-2025
- Politics
- Japan Times
In Upper House race, younger voters in Tokyo turn to DPP for new direction
A growing drive among younger voters to find an alternative to the traditions of the Liberal Democratic Party is taking center stage in Tokyo ahead of Sunday's Upper House election, where it has 32 candidates in the running for seven seats. One party receiving increased interest amid such a shift is the Democratic Party for the People (DPP), which appears to be drawing in noticeably bigger and younger crowds to their speeches on the streets in the heart of Japan. 'The DPP strongly believes in bringing back a strong Japan — at the same time, we are firmly committed to pursuing policies that shed light on those people who have been dismissed up until now as being on their own,' said the Tokyo district's DPP candidate Mayu Ushida to a crowd in Shibuya Ward on Friday. Although 40-year-old Ushida's youthful energy and public persona as a former NHK announcer is alluring, many in the crowd at her speeches say it's not just about her — they are supporters of what her party stands for and are looking to help the DPP gain more seats in parliament. DPP candidate Mayu Ushida, along with party leader Tamaki Yuichiro, waves to supporters at Shibuya Scramble crossing on Jul. 11. | Yukana Inoue At Ushida's speech held near Shibuya's famous scramble crossing last Friday, she was accompanied by party leader Yuichiro Tamaki, who spent more than three times longer than Ushida talking to passers-by. 'When I say (enrich the working generation), people ask me, 'Are you cutting off the elderly?' — but that's fine,' said Tamaki to an enthusiastic crowd. 'We want to first and foremost offer thorough support to the working generation — all of you who are currently working and young people — because unless we strengthen the power of those who support it, we will ultimately end up reducing pension funds.' The DPP, which runs on the primary campaign promise of increasing take-home pay, resonates with many in Tokyo, where the cost of living is the highest in the country, with supporters highly regarding the party's realistic and seemingly tangible policies. 'Since last year's Lower House election, I was struck by (the DPP's) policies that targeted the current working generation,' said a 23-year-old man, who asked to remain anonymous for privacy reasons, in the crowd in Shibuya. Prior to that, he said he used to support the LDP. '(The DPP's promise of) increasing take-home pay and protecting our own country by ourselves — I really feel that those are necessary (for our future).' With the speech held in Shibuya, an area typically full of younger people, Tamaki strategically addressed college students, emphasizing the DPP's success in raising the tax-free income threshold for dependent children with part-time jobs from ¥1.03 million to ¥1.5 million, following through on its promise during the Lower House election. 'This was something that no one has done for 30 years — no party even paid attention to it — but we fought the election by incorporating the voices from university students in our policy and negotiated with the ruling party, and we were able to raise the amount to ¥1.5 million,' said Tamaki on Friday. 'This is what I mean — it may be a small change, but we create change with specific suggestions.' A 21-year-old college student listening to Ushida, who was accompanied by the DPP secretary-general Kazuya Shimba the previous day in Hamura city, Tokyo, said she became interested in the DPP after taking an online party-matching questionnaire during last year's Lower House election and finding her beliefs aligned closest to it. 'Back then, I didn't really know them, but when I did more research I was surprised to find that there was a party that was doing everything I wanted — since I'm a college student, I really wanted them to raise the tax-free income threshold from ¥1.03 million,' said Sato, who asked to go by her last name. 'Since there are no DPP candidates in the Ibaraki district, I can only vote for the party under the proportional representation,' said Sato, who attends university in Tokyo but resides in Ibaraki Prefecture. In the district, media polls suggest, candidates from the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan and Sanseito are vying for the DPP supporters, but neither interest her. 'I'm from Ibaraki, so cars are an absolute necessity, so I really want them to pay the gasoline tax .' One of the DPP's campaign promises for this election is cutting the tax on gasoline to bring down gas prices — a lifeline for many like Sato. A crowd gathers to hear DPP candidate Mayu Ushida, accompanied by DPP secretary-general Kazuya Shimba, in front of Hamura station on Jul. 10. | Yukana Inoue Elsewhere in Tokyo, another DPP candidate — albeit with less backup — is also attempting to garner votes by vouching for topics relevant to the working generation. 'When I began working after graduating from college, the issue I was confronted with was repaying my scholarship,' said Yoshihiro Okumura in front of Jiyugaoka Station in the capital's Meguro Ward on Friday. At 31, he is one of the youngest candidates in the Tokyo district and spoke on the increasing number of working-generation people struggling to repay student loans, an issue that speaks to many in their 20s to 40s. 'A number of factors have combined to create this situation, including the economic issue that a family's take-home pay is not increasing while college tuition and living expenses are rising,' he said. Aside from the DPP's pocketbook campaign, some constituents straying from the LDP have found a new home in far-right Sanseito , where a singer and candidate who goes by the name Saya has gained mass support running on the party's platform of 'Japanese first,' according to polls by major news agencies. These alternatives in the district stand in jarring contrast to the LDP's Keizo Takemi, who is seeking to be re-elected for a sixth time at 73 years old. The former health minister has taken a contrasting approach to the DPP's grassroots tactics, appealing to seasoned supporters with speeches mainly held indoors with backing by big names including Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike, and former prime ministers Fumio Kishida and Taro Aso. However, the district continues to be led by celebrity LDP candidate Daichi Suzuki — a former sports agency chief and Olympic swimmer who won gold for Japan in 1988 — with 30% of LDP supporters surveyed saying they will vote for him and also favored by a portion of voters unaffiliated with a party. Others trail closely behind, including incumbent representatives from the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan Ayaka Shiomura and the Japanese Communist Party's Yoshiko Kira, as well as Komeito's newcomer Yudai Kawamura, according to polls. Among voters in their 30s, Ushida is receiving the most support, and is favored by 40% of DPP supporters. Early voting for the Upper House election began on July 4.


Japan Times
17-07-2025
- Politics
- Japan Times
From stalking to death threats, female candidates still face harassment
Mayu Ushida, an Upper House election candidate for the Democratic Party for the People, was driving home after she finished stumping on the evening of June 6 in Tokyo when she realized someone was tailing her. She slowed down a couple of times to let the car pass, but it kept tailing her. When she stopped by the side of the road, the other car did too. It took her about half an hour to lose the mystery driver. 'It was scary. I kept wondering how far this person was going to follow me, and whether I'd be able to shake the driver off. I was horrified,' Ushida said Tuesday, recalling the incident. Ushida's campaign office suspects the stalker wanted to find out where she lived rather than disrupt her political activities. Female candidates in the Upper House election face many forms of harassment from voters and supporters — from stalking and death threats to uncomfortably long handshakes and hugs. It remains a challenge as Japan aims to increase the number of women running for office. The government set a goal of having women as 35% of parliamentary candidates by 2025, but only 29.1% of the candidates were women this time. Since the stalking incident, Ushida's office decided to temporarily stop publicizing the schedules of her rallies on social media and the DPP tightened security for her. Police also now patrol Ushida's public rallies. Meet-and-greets can be an uncomfortable experience for female candidates. At times, male voters jump onto Ushida to hug her and refuse to let go of her hand. Now, she prefers fist-bumping to handshakes. In another case, a Sanseito candidate who goes by her first name Saya reportedly received multiple death threats via email and filed a report to the police earlier this month. Independent candidate Shiori Yamao, a former Lower House member of the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, also told the police that she has been receiving death threats. 'I know men are trying to be aware, but women are being showered with more defamation than they realize. (Women) are standing here with the risk of being slandered and attacked. It's not just me," Yamao said during a stump speech earlier this month. Female local assembly members are also facing similar problems. Some 53.8% of female local assembly members said they have been harassed, compared to 23.6% for their male counterparts, according to a Cabinet Office report released in June. Among male local assembly members, 41% said they have never experienced harassment nor heard of others experiencing it, compared to 19.5% of female local assembly members. The report showed that women have had to grapple with various forms of harassment, ranging from touching to cat-calling from both voters and colleagues. Experts say that while Japan is far from ridding elections of harassment, creating spaces for female candidates to seek help is an important start. 'Japan doesn't have an organized system of consultation centers and ordinances. The goal of zero harassment is too big for now,' said Mari Hamada, co-director of the NPO Harassment Consultation Center for Women in Politics. 'That's why we need to use public funds and establish specialized agencies (to start tackling harassment),' she said. 'If we don't, we won't see (Japan) getting serious about electing more women to public office.'

07-07-2025
- Politics
2025 POLLS: DPFP's Bullish Strategy in Tokyo Hit Snags
News from Japan Politics Jul 7, 2025 20:20 (JST) Tokyo, July 7 (Jiji Press)--Dark clouds are now hanging over the Democratic Party for the People's bullish strategy for the Tokyo constituency in the upcoming House of Councillors election. In late April, when the center-right opposition party announced it would field two rookies--former NHK newscaster Mayu Ushida and former corporate worker Yoshihiro Okumura--in the largest Upper House constituency with seven seats up for grabs in total in the July 20 election. "They both can win seats," a party executive said at the time in view of continued tailwinds for the DPFP, which quadrupled its seats to 28 in last autumn's election for the House of Representatives, the all-important lower chamber, and was enjoying higher approval ratings than the leading opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan in media polls. But the DPFP saw public support quickly go south in the wake of media reports that the party planned to pick Shiori Yamao, a sex scandal-hit former Lower House lawmaker, as a proportional representative candidate in the upcoming election. The plan was aborted later. DPFP chief Yuichiro Tamaki's comment likening government reserve rice set for release to consumers amid retail rice price spikes to "animal feed" also fueled backlash against the party. [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.] Jiji Press