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Japan's PM Ishiba Resigns After Electoral Blows for Ruling LDP
The Straits Times
|September 08, 2025
Difficult decision made to stave off brewing civil war within party, he says

TOKYO - Defiant but finding himself increasingly isolated within the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said on Sept 7 that he was calling time on a short-lived tenure.
Mr Ishiba, who took office on Oct 1, 2024, will remain as prime minister until the LDP picks a successor.
Bowing in apology and appearing to blink back tears, the 68-year-old leader admitted he had come to a difficult decision that he felt was necessary to stave off a brewing civil war within the party.
"I am deeply sorry to the public for having to step down this way," he told a 50-minute nationally televised news conference. "I will devote all my heart and soul during my remaining time to tackling policy issues."
His resignation follows a "turning point" after US President Donald Trump signed off on an executive order on a trade deal with Japan on Sept 4, closing a chapter on what Mr Ishiba has long described as a "national crisis".
"I have always said that I am not attached to my position, and that I will make a decision (on my future) at the appropriate time," he said. "As LDP president, I bear responsibility for the election results. Now that negotiations regarding US tariff measures have reached a conclusion, I believe that this is the appropriate time to step down."
Mr Ishiba's position had looked increasingly untenable with his arch-rivals within the LDP, such as former prime minister Taro Aso, 84, openly agitating for his ouster.
A long-time outsider and vocal gadfly on the LDP's fringes, Mr Ishiba defied expectations to take office on his fifth bid, as the party grappled with the fallout from a damaging political funding scandal.
However, he faced a tall order from day one, hampered by the small size of his coterie of trusted allies and the party's deeply entrenched vested interests that clashed with reform ideals.
Dit verhaal komt uit de September 08, 2025-editie van The Straits Times.
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