Japan’s PM-in-waiting Takaichi smashes glass ceiling: will she be able to deliver amid often government change?

Sanae Takaichi Set To Become Japan’s First Female Prime Minister

by John Geddie
twitter sharing button
whatsapp sharing button
Get breaking news fast — follow us on WhatsApp and Telegram.

SANAE Takaichi came out top in a male-dominated race to lead Japan’s ruling party on Saturday, putting her on course to emulate her hero, former British leader Margaret Thatcher, and become her country’s first female prime minister.

The fiscal dove’s surprise victory may jolt investor confidence in one of the world’s most indebted economies, while her nationalist positions could stoke friction with powerful neighbour China, political analysts say.

Once a Heavy Metal Drummer, Sanae Takaichi Set to Become Japan's First  Woman PM - Asian Community News

She has also raised the possibility of redoing an investment deal with the United States that reduced President Donald Trump’s punishing tariffs on Japanese goods.

Having lost a run-off against Shigeru Ishiba to lead the Liberal Democratic Party last year, Takaichi, 64, will now seek approval from parliament to replace him as prime minister.

Japan is set to appoint its first female prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, a  64-year-old conservative politician known for her long-time admiration of  Britain's first female prime minister, Margaret Thatcher. She is now

That is expected as the LDP is the largest party in parliament but it is not assured, as the ruling coalition no longer has a majority in either house after losses in elections over the last year under Ishiba.

Hosting Trump in Japan later this month is expected to be one of Takaichi’s first acts as leader.

LIVE: Japan's Next PM? | First Woman Or Youngest Leader In The Making |  News9 - YouTube

“Rather than being happy, I feel like the tough work starts here,” Takaichi said in a speech to her fellow LDP lawmakers after her victory.

A former economic security and interior minister, Takaichi has repeatedly referred to Thatcher as a source of inspiration, citing her strong character and convictions coupled with her “womanly warmth”.

She said she met the conservative Thatcher, a divisive figure in British politics known as “the Iron Lady”, at a symposium shortly before Thatcher’s death in 2013.

A drummer and a fan of heavy metal, Takaichi is no stranger to creating noise herself.

She is a regular visitor to the Yasukuni shrine, which honours Japan’s war dead, including some executed war criminals, and is viewed by some Asian neighbours as a symbol of its past militarism.

Takaichi favours revising Japan’s pacifist postwar constitution to recognise the role of its expanding military. She suggested this year that Japan could form a “quasi-security alliance” with Taiwan, the democratically governed island claimed by China.

Although Takaichi has pledged to increase the number of female cabinet ministers, an area where Japan has lagged its G7 peers, polls show her conservative positions chime more with men than women.

英國🇬🇧首位女性首相 & 日本🇯🇵首位女性首相 coming soon Margaret Thatcher 柴切爾夫人 & Takaichi  Sanae 高市早苗 in 2006

She opposes same-sex marriage and allowing married couples to have separate surnames, an issue that has broad public support in Japan but faces staunch opposition from conservative circles.

But it is her economic policies that might create the biggest shockwaves.

A protege of the late Shinzo Abe and long-time advocate of the former prime minister’s “Abenomics” stimulus policies, Takaichi has called for higher spending and tax cuts to cushion the rising cost of living and has criticised the Bank of Japan’s decision to raise interest rates.

Takaichi’s mother was a police officer in her native Nara in western Japan, and her father worked in Japan’s automotive industry.

In a speech last month, she complained about tourists kicking sacred deer that roam Nara Park, pledging a crackdown on badly behaved foreigners.

Takaichi graduated from Kobe University with a degree in business management before working as a congressional fellow at the US Congress, according to her website.

She broke into Japanese politics winning a lower house seat in 1993 as an independent, before joining the LDP in 1996.


The writer is from Reuters

Source :

NST

You may also like...

About us


Our Newly established Center for study of Asian Affairs has
branches in Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore, as well as freelances in some other countries.

For inquires, please contact: newsofasia.info@yahoo.com Mr.Mohd Zarif - Secretary of the Center and administer of the web-site www.newsofasia.net

Polls

Which region news you interested in most?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...