Ultraconservative nationalist Sanae Takaichi was elected Japan’s first woman prime minister after a historic parliamentary vote on Tuesday.
She was likely to be sworn in as the country’s 104th prime minister later in the evening, succeeding Shigeru Ishiba, who resigned last month after the ruling Liberal Democratic Party suffered heavy electoral losses.
Ms Takaichi, 64, won the ruling party’s leadership contest after Mr Ishiba resigned, but secured the country’s top job only after the LDP, which remains the largest party in the parliament, stitched up a coalition with the smaller right-wing Japan Innovation Party, known as Ishin.
Calling herself the successor of former prime minister Shinzo Abe, whom she was an ally of, Ms Takaichi said she would pick Satsuki Katayama as the first woman finance minister at a time of rising prices and slowing growth.
After winning the party’s leadership contest, she vowed to “work, work, work” to turn “people’s anxieties about their daily lives and the future into hope”.
“I have thrown away my own work-life balance and I will work, work, work,” she said.
“Recently, I have heard harsh voices from across the country saying we do not know what the LDP stands for anymore,” she had said in a speech before the second-round vote. “That sense of urgency drove me. I wanted to turn people’s anxieties about their daily lives and the future into hope.”
Ms Takaichi faces the mammoth task of winning back trust from a public angered by rising prices and corruption scandals, and drawn to opposition groups promising big stimulus and clampdowns on foreigners. She must also shoulder the responsibility of steering a fractured party marred by scandal while navigating a nation grappling with demographic decline.
Though her leadership campaign did not focus overwhelmingly on her gender, Ms Takaichi noted in her victory speech that she had “made history for the LDP”.
“Right now, instead of savouring joy, I’m overwhelmed by what’s ahead, a mountain of challenges that I have to tackle with help from all of you,” she said at the time.
“We must make our party one that is more energetic and cheerful so that we can change the people’s worries into hope,” she added, seeking cooperation from LDP lawmakers. “Otherwise, we can’t rebuild our party.”
A former economic security and interior minister, Ms Takaichi cites Margaret Thatcher as a source of inspiration. She refers to the former British prime minister as a political hero, citing her strong character and convictions coupled with her “womanly warmth”.
She met “the Iron Lady” at a symposium shortly before Thatcher’s death in 2013, she said.
“My goal is to become the Iron Lady,” she told a group of children during the campaign.
A drummer and a fan of heavy metal, Ms Takaichi is no stranger to making some noise herself. She’s 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.
She called for a hardline stance towards China after the neighbouring country marked the 80th anniversary of Japan’s defeat and the end of the World War with its grandest military parade this past summer.
She previously pledged to form a cabinet with gender parity, marking a shift from the outgoing premier’s ministry, which included just two women. But surveys suggest her conservative views resonate more strongly with men than with women.
Ms Takaichi remains opposed to same-sex marriage and to revising a 19th century policy which could allow married couples to use separate surnames. She also backs male-only imperial succession.
Yuki Tsuji, a professor specialising in politics and gender at Tokai University, said Ms Takaichi had “no interest in women’s rights or gender equality policies”.
“Therefore, it is unlikely that any change will occur in this policy area compared with previous LDP administrations,” she told AFP news agency.
However, professor Tsuji said the symbolic significance of having a woman as the premier was “quite substantial”. If she failed to achieve results, though, “this could foster negative perceptions of women prime ministers”.
Japan ranks 118th out of 148 countries in the World Economic Forum’s 2025 Global Gender Gap Report, with women making only 15 per cent of the parliament’s Lower House.
It is Ms Takaichi’s economic agenda, though, that could send the greatest tremors through Japan’s political and financial establishment.
A protege of the late Abe and a supporter of his “Abenomics” stimulus programme, Ms Takaichi has urged increased public spending and tax cuts to offset the increasing cost of living while criticising the Bank of Japan’s decision to hike interest rates.
The central bank’s governor Kazuo Ueda previously said it would set rates “without any preconceptions”.
Born in Nara, western Japan, to a police officer mother and a father employed in the country’s vital automotive sector, Ms Takaichi has often drawn on her roots to shape her political image.
In a speech last month, she denounced tourists for mistreating the sacred deer at the Nara Park, promising tougher action against unruly foreigners.
It is the sort of stance that is increasingly striking a chord with voters amid record numbers of tourists visiting Japan, though when pressed, Ms Takaichi struggled to provide evidence for incidents of the kinds of animal abuse she described.
A graduate of Kobe University with a degree in business management, Ms Takaichi served as a congressional fellow in the US Congress, according to her website.
Apparently eager to grasp how Japan was seen abroad, she worked in the office of Democrat Patricia Schroeder, known for her sharp criticism of Tokyo.
Before entering politics, Ms Takaichi reportedly worked as a television host. She joined politics in 1993, winning a seat in the lower house as an independent before joining the LDP three years later.
She has won 10 parliamentary elections since and carved out a reputation as one of the party’s most vocal conservative figures.
Ms Takaichi said she would travel overseas more regularly than her predecessor to spread the word that “Japan is Back!”
“Takaichi is a very experienced politician. She has had some experience working in the US as well and she’s a long-term observer of US-Japan relations, so that’s her strength,” said Yuka Hayashi, vice president of the Asia Group, a strategic advisory firm based in Washington.
“She said that she’s confident that she could build a very strong personal relationship with President Trump. And the reason for that’s her policy focuses on what she calls the ‘Japan First’ policy. And that kind of corresponds to President Trump’s America First policy. She sees that sort of common thread there. On the other hand, she is a hardliner, very conservative when it comes to Japan’s relationship with its Asian neighbours,” said Mr Hayashi.
“She has had a very hawkish stance on World War II legacy issues. She has insisted on visiting the Yasukuni Shrine numerous times, knowing that would inflame Japan’s relationship with its neighbours. So there is some concern that she could fuel tensions with the relationship with South Korea and China. This is a very challenging time for the LDP so I think she would probably try to focus on party unity and be very careful about taking excessively conservative hardline stances in foreign policy.”