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Japan's Ruling Party Picks Sanae Takaichi as New Leader -- Update

Dow Jones10-04

By Jason Douglas and Junko Fukutome

TOKYO -- Japan is set to have its first female prime minister, a staunch conservative who wants to borrow and spend more to rev up Japan's economy and says she's willing to reopen a hard-won trade deal with the U.S.

Sanae Takaichi, 64 years old, was elected leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party on Saturday, in a party poll that followed the September resignation of her predecessor, Shigeru Ishiba. Though the LDP lacks a clear majority in Parliament, she is expected to win enough support from lawmakers to succeed Ishiba as prime minister later this month.

Among Takaichi's most pressing tasks: fortifying an alliance with the U.S. that has been strained by President Trump's all-out push to reorder global trade. Japan agreed to invest $550 billion in the U.S. over the next few years in exchange for a tariff of 15% on U.S. imports of its cars, machinery, and other products. That's a better rate than the 27.5% Japan was facing on cars before the agreement was made, but much worse than the low tariffs most of its exports enjoyed before Trump's return to office.

On the election stump, Takaichi said she'd abide by the tariff agreement reached by her predecessor. She also, however, floated the possibility of renegotiation if her government determined the pact wasn't working in Japan's interests.

That is a sign that the terms of the deal -- which, among other things, give Trump the role of selecting investments for Japan to consider funding -- still don't sit easily with a country that considers itself among the U.S.'s foremost allies and its strongest partner in Asia.

"If any aspects emerge that are highly unequal and detrimental to the national interests of both countries, we must firmly voice our concerns. There is also the possibility of renegotiation," Takaichi said at a press conference in the days before the vote.

The remark points to the potential for further spats over trade and investment, analysts say. Under the terms of the agreement, Trump reserved the right to raise tariffs on Japanese imports if Japan refuses to fund specific investments.

"If she does want to try to reopen that, it is going to cause a lot of friction," said Jeffrey Hornung, Japan lead at Rand Corp., a California-based research institute, referring to the trade agreement.

Takaichi won Saturday with around 54% of the votes cast in a second-round runoff against Shinjiro Koizumi, a 44-year-old scion of a Japanese political dynasty and a political moderate. She led the first round in a field of five, but fell short of winning enough votes to clinch the contest outright.

" Rather than feeling joy, I recognize the immense challenges ahead. I believe there are mountains upon mountains of work," she said after her victory was announced.

Growing up in a middle-class household where both parents worked, Takaichi dreamed of being a rock musician. As a student, she rode a Kawasaki motorbike to Kobe University and joined a band as a drummer.

While little-known overseas, she has been a prominent political figure in Japan for years, holding several cabinet posts including minister for economic security.

Takaichi's elevation is a sign the LDP is eager to win back conservative voters who have deserted the party since Abe's killing in 2022. Many of those voters have drifted to the right, bolstering the fortunes of newer political parties such as Sanseito, whose anti-immigration, "Japanese First" platform propelled it from the online fringe to surprise electoral success in a parliamentary vote last year.

Her premiership could strain relations with Japan's Asian neighbors, however. Takaichi is hawkish toward China and supportive of Taiwan, the self-ruled island that Beijing claims as its own. She is a regular visitor to Japan's Yasukuni Shrine, which honors Japanese war dead including some war criminals. Such visits by serving Japanese leaders are seen as provocative in both Beijing and Seoul, where memories run deep of the atrocities Japan committed during its imperial expansion that ended with its defeat in World War II.

Write to Jason Douglas at jason.douglas@wsj.com and Junko Fukutome at junko.fukutome@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

October 04, 2025 02:20 ET (06:20 GMT)

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