The prime minister’s sweeping lower-house victory delivers the strongest mandate for a Japanese government in more than seven decades and reshapes the country’s political landscape
Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has secured a commanding mandate after her ruling Liberal Democratic Party won a landslide in a snap general election, delivering the strongest parliamentary majority for a Japanese government in more than seven decades.
The vote followed a high-risk decision by Takaichi to dissolve the lower house and seek an early endorsement from the electorate only months after taking office.
The gamble paid off decisively on Sunday, with her party capturing a two-thirds supermajority in the 465-seat chamber, giving the government the numbers to drive legislation through the lower house with unprecedented ease.
The result has reshaped Japan’s political landscape, long characterised by cautious, incremental leadership and dominated for decades by older male politicians.
Takaichi’s rapid rise and mass appeal have energised voters who typically stay on the sidelines, particularly younger Japanese, while also offering her party a fresh public face at a moment when it had been under pressure from inflation, voter fatigue and reputational damage.
Takaichi’s political profile blends hard-edged social conservatism with an interventionist economic stance.
She has opposed same-sex marriage, backed patriotic education and defended Japan’s single-surname system.
On constitutional reform, she has pledged to press persistently for revision of the post-war framework, including the provision that renounces war, while acknowledging that the process would still require support in the upper house and approval in a national referendum.
Economically, she has aligned herself with robust government action, moving quickly to pursue large-scale spending and framing her agenda around restoring confidence, raising living standards and strengthening national resilience.
Her supporters argue that the scale of the victory reflects a public desire for decisive governance and a clearer national direction.
Internationally, Takaichi has reinforced ties with key partners, while projecting a more direct posture on regional security.
Her recent comments linking the security of Taiwan to Japan’s national interests have further strained already difficult relations with Beijing, which has responded with sharper rhetoric and increased pressure measures.
Takaichi, however, has portrayed Japan’s stance as principled, deterrence-focused and grounded in national self-defence.
The election has also highlighted warming personal and political rapport between Tokyo and Washington.
US President
Donald Trump, who praised Takaichi during the campaign period, offered public support ahead of the vote and signalled interest in early engagement with her government, reinforcing the prospect of deeper strategic alignment.
With the next election not due until 2027, the scale of the mandate gives Takaichi a clear runway to pursue her domestic reforms and security agenda, while opponents face the challenge of rebuilding credibility in a political environment now decisively tilted in her favour.