Skip to content

JOBUZO

  • News
  • Indonesia
  • Toggle search form
Japanese lawmakers launch leadership bids after PM resigns, yen sinks on uncertainty

Japanese lawmakers launch leadership bids after PM resigns, yen sinks on uncertainty

Posted on 8 September 2025 By jobuzo

TOKYO, Sept 8 — Former Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi became the first ruling party lawmaker to throw his hat into the ring to succeed outgoing Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba today, as financial markets whipsawed on the political uncertainty.

Ishiba called time on his brief tenure yesterday, saying he was taking responsibility for bruising elections that saw his ruling coalition lose its majority in both houses of parliament amid voter anger over rising living costs.

He instructed his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) — which has governed Japan for most of its post-war history — to hold an emergency leadership election. The party plans to hold the vote on October 4, broadcaster TBS reported, citing an unnamed senior party official.

Japan’s yen sank and stocks surged today after Ishiba’s resignation stoked speculation that his potential successors — such as fiscal dove Sanae Takaichi — may ramp up spending in the world’s most indebted advanced economy.

“The LDP is facing its worst crisis since its founding,” Motegi, 69, told reporters today as he announced his plan to stand for leadership.

“We must unite quickly to tackle our serious challenges at home and abroad and move the country forward.”

News :<div>12 weeks' jail for school IT support technician who took upskirt videos of teachers</div>

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi also intends to run in the election, a source close to the government’s top spokesperson told Reuters.

The frontrunners, however, are LDP veteran Takaichi and Shinjiro Koizumi, a political scion and son of former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, who gained prominence as Ishiba’s farm minister tasked with trying to rein in soaring rice prices.

Both would mark milestones for Japan: Takaichi, 64, becoming its first female leader and Koizumi, 44, its youngest in the modern era.

Neither has formally announced their candidacy but they finished second and third respectively in the last leadership contest in September 2024.

“All indications are that it will come down to them facing off against each other,” said Jeffrey Hall, a lecturer in Japanese studies at Kanda University of International Studies.

Conservative contender

News :Migrant acquitted in first trial over US border military zones

Of most consequence for investors and Japan’s diplomatic relations would be Takaichi, who has held a number of posts including as economic security and internal affairs ministers.

She stands out for her opposition to the Bank of Japan’s interest rate hikes and her calls to ramp up spending to boost the fragile economy.

Investors are betting the political hiatus alone will delay the BOJ’s monetary policy tightening plans.

Money markets are now pricing in a roughly 20 per cent chance of the BOJ hiking rates by the end of October, down from 46 per cent a week ago.

The expected leadership bid of the nationalistic Takaichi will also be closely watched by Japan’s powerful neighbour China.

Known for conservative positions such as revising the pacifist constitution, Takaichi is a regular visitor to the Yasukuni shrine to honour Japan’s war dead, viewed by Beijing and others as a symbol of past militarism.

Takaichi earlier this year also visited Taiwan, the democratic island claimed by China, where she suggested Taiwan, Japan and other partners could form a “quasi-security alliance”.

“China might take a more hostile stance towards Japan, because she depicts herself as very much a hawk regarding China,” said Hall of Kanda University. — Reuters

Japanese lawmakers launch leadership bids after PM resigns, yen sinks on uncertainty


News

Post navigation

Previous Post: Teen shoots two police officers dead in Turkey’s Izmir, injures one other
Next Post: ‘All I see is blood’: Kony survivors recall horrors ahead of trial

Related Posts

OpenAI strikes a deal with the Defense Department to deploy its AI models OpenAI strikes a deal with the Defense Department to deploy its AI models News
John Bolton pleads not guilty to charges accusing him of sharing classified information News
From stalking to death threats, female candidates still face harassment From stalking to death threats, female candidates still face harassment News

Latest

  • Crow-Armstrong’s RBI single in the bottom of the 9th lifts Cubs past the Athletics 7-6
  • ‘Sanctimonious’ stars or guardians of journalism? 60 Minutes’ implosion tightens Trump’s media grip
  • 16-year-old boy in Thailand allegedly stabs stepfather to death for attacking his mother
  • Love Island UK’s George Knight Suddenly Quits, Leaves Villa
  • Ahead of its IPO, Anthropic’s Daniela Amodei shrugs off doubts about AI’s returns
  • Airbnb’s Brian Chesky plans to launch a new AI lab
  • US public cheers dancing Unitree robots while Congress looks to ban them
  • Israel, Lebanon agree to implement ceasefire
  • Russia says energy crisis shows Europe cannot survive without its oil and gas
  • Lansing shooting: Shots fired at E 170th Street, opposite Lansing Police Department in Illinois; first details

Copyright © 2025 JOBUZO. Disclaimers | Privacy Policies

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs