
Shigeru Ishiba, Japan's rapidly diminishing PM
According to media projections after elections, Ishiba's coalition was projected to have lost its majority in the upper house, a result that might push him to resign.
Late on Sunday, he was tight-lipped about his future.
'It's a difficult situation, and we have to take it very humbly and seriously,' Ishiba told broadcaster NHK.
'We can't do anything until we see the final results, but we want to be very aware of our responsibility,' Ishiba added.
The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has governed Japan almost continuously since 1955, but whether anyone wants to replace Ishiba is another matter.
'I wonder who else wants the job,' Masahisa Endo, politics professor at Waseda University, told AFP before the election result.
Ishiba, 68, a self-confessed defence 'geek', is the son of a regional governor and is from Japan's small Christian minority.
Seen as a safe pair of hands, he won the party leadership in September, on his fifth try, to become the LDP's 10th separate prime minister since 2000, all of them men.
Ishiba pledged to 'create a new Japan' and revitalise depressed rural regions, and to address the 'quiet emergency' of Japan's shrinking population.
He immediately called lower house elections for October but that backfired spectactularly, with the LDP suffering its worst result in 15 years.
That robbed the LDP and its coalition party Komeito of their majority, forcing them to bargain with opposition parties to pass legislation.
Ishiba's policies on bringing down inflation and spurring growth have 'flip-flopped', Stefan Angrick at Moody's Analytics said last week.
The government 'boxed itself in, promising only some belated and half-hearted financial support that will do little to improve the demand outlook,' Angrick said.
The government's popularity ratings have plummeted, with voters angry about price rises, especially for rice that is twice as expensive as a year ago.
– Clumsy ways –
Ishiba, the father of two daughters, also appointed only two women to his cabinet, down from five under predecessor Fumio Kishida.
Ishiba's sometimes clumsy ways — ranging from the less-than-perfectly tidy arrangement of his tuxedo to his table manners — have also been rich fodder for social media memes.
He drew ridicule after being snapped apparently napping in parliament and for failing to stand up to greet other world leaders at a gathering in South America.
Worse was a video that emerged of Ishiba eating an onigiri rice ball — a popular snack — whole and munching on it without closing his mouth.
'He eats like a three-year-old,' wroter one user on social media platform X.
– No deal –
A major challenge has been dealing with US President Donald Trump, who has imposed painful tariffs on Japanese cars, steel and aluminium.
Further levies of 25 percent on other Japanese imports — up from 10 percent currently — will come into force on August 1 if there is no trade agreement.
Ishiba secured an early invitation to the White House in February and has sent his tariffs envoy to Washington seven times, but there has been no deal yet.
Then-premier Shinzo Abe — dubbed a 'Trump whisperer' — fared better during Trump's first term, managing to shield Japan from any tariffs.
Abe, who was assassinated in 2022, gifted Trump a gold-coloured golf club and was a frequent guest of the US president.
According to Trump, Abe even nominated him for the Nobel prize. 'There will never be another like him,' he said after Abe's death.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Rudaw Net
3 days ago
- Rudaw Net
Female Kurdish force rescues Yazidi woman from 11 years ISIS captivity
Also in Syria Suwayda doctors recount harrowing accounts of sectarian violence Damascus rejects SDF demands to retain weapons, form separate military bloc Explosion kills at least 6 in Syria's Idlib Syria church denies Christian displacement from Suwayda amid violence A+ A- ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - An all-female Kurdish force in northeast Syria rescued a 21-year-old Yazidi woman who had been held captive by the Islamic State (ISIS) for 11 years. Riham H. 'was rescued by the Women's Protection Units (YPJ) and handed over to Shingal Resistance Units (YBS) and Shingal Women's Units (YJS) to be returned to her family,' the YPJ said in a statement on Thursday. Riham was kidnapped by ISIS during its 2014 occupation of Shingal (Sinjar). She was 10 years old at the time of her abduction. The statement did not detail where she had been held captive. The YPJ is the women's branch of the People's Protection Units (YPG), which is the backbone of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). The Kurdish female fighters have been recognized for their fight against ISIS, in particular their role in defending the besieged Kurdish town of Kobane in 2014-2015. The force said their 'struggle against the terrorist organization ISIS will continue with all its difficulties' until all the missing Yazidi women are rescued. Yazidi women and men who were children at the time of their abduction continue to be rescued from across Syria and the Middle East. During its 2014 assault on Shingal, ISIS abducted 6,417 Yazidi women and children, many of whom were subjected to sexual slavery and forced labor. Nearly 2,600 of them are still missing, according to the Office of Rescuing Abducted Yazidis, which is affiliated with the Kurdistan Region Presidency. Although ISIS was territorially defeated in Iraq by 2017 and in Syria by 2019, it continues to pose a security threat in the region.


Iraqi News
3 days ago
- Iraqi News
ICC convicts pair over Central Africa war crimes
The Hague – The International Criminal Court Thursday convicted a former top Central African Republic football official and a militiaman nicknamed Rambo for multiple war crimes committed during the country's civil war in 2013 and 2014. Ex-sports minister Patrice-Edouard Ngaissona was a senior leader of mainly Christian militias as the country slid into civil war, while Alfred Yekatom, a former MP, commanded them on the ground. The ICC sentenced Yekatom to 15 years behind bars for 20 war crimes and crimes against humanity including murder and torture. Ngaissona received a sentence of 12 years for 28 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity. Their militia, known as anti-Balaka or 'anti-machete', were formed as vigilante self-defence groups after mainly Muslim rebels called the Seleka stormed the capital Bangui and removed then-president Francois Bozize, a Christian. Presiding judge Bertram Schmitt read harrowing details of the violence committed by the militia against suspected Seleka Muslims. Yekatom's men tortured one suspect by cutting off his fingers, toes, and one ear. This man's body was never found. Others were killed and then mutilated. Appearing in court dressed in a light brown suit and waistcoat, white shirt, and dark tie, Yekatom listened impassively as the judge read out the verdict. Dressed in a bright blue jacket, Ngaissona nodded to the judge as his sentence was delivered. The court found Yekatom not guilty of conscripting child soldiers and acquitted Ngaissona of the charge of rape. Both men had pleaded not guilty to all charges. Yekatom was extradited to The Hague in late 2018, after being arrested in the CAR for firing his gun in parliament. Ngaissona was arrested in France in December 2018 and extradited to The Hague. At the time he was head of the CAR football association and a board member of the Confederation of African Football (CAF). The Central African Republic is among the poorest nations in the world and has endured a succession of civil wars and authoritarian governments since independence in 1960. Violence has subsided in recent years but fighting occasionally erupts in remote regions between rebels and the national army, which is backed by Russian mercenaries and Rwandan troops. Set up in 2002, the ICC is the world's only independent tribunal capable of prosecuting those accused of the world's worst crimes.


Rudaw Net
3 days ago
- Rudaw Net
Suwayda doctors recount harrowing accounts of sectarian violence
Also in Syria Damascus rejects SDF demands to retain weapons, form separate military bloc Explosion kills at least 6 in Syria's Idlib Syria church denies Christian displacement from Suwayda amid violence UN says 'vital' for Damascus to hold perpetrators of killings accountable A+ A- ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - Doctors from a hospital in Syria's southern province of Suwayda recount to Rudaw the moment they were raided by state-affiliated security forces in recent days during the sectarian clashes between Druze militants and Sunni tribal fighters. The violence left at least 1,300 people dead since it started on July 13, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR). It ended with a ceasefire over the weekend. Inside the Suwayda National Hospital - the province's main medical center - doctors were working tirelessly to prepare bodies for burial. A doctor told Rudaw that they were in the emergency section of the hospital when it came under attack recently. State-affiliated 'General Security forces entered the room, forced everyone out with Kalashnikovs and made them kneel, took photos, and sent video recordings. They said, 'You Druze are pigs and must sit here.'' said the doctor, adding that the forces shot a volunteer medical staff dead after cursing him. Another doctor at the hospital warned of the risk of diseases spreading due to bodies having remained on the ground for several days. 'The hospital is destroyed… The hospital is destroyed. Now, everything in the hospital is broken, due to shelling and bullets. We don't have medical supplies available. No aid has reached us from outside.' Damascus-affiliated forces have been accused of summary executions.