Prime Minister Ishiba Resigns as LDP Leader, Will Not Run in Interim Contest
Shigeru Ishiba resigned as prime minister after the Liberal Democratic Party lost its majority in the July 2025 upper house election, triggering a leadership contest amid political instability.
- Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba announced his resignation on September 7, 2025, due to election losses and party pressure to take responsibility.
- Ishiba's resignation will initiate a leadership race in the Liberal Democratic Party, with candidates expected to emerge for the party presidential election planned for early October.
- Ishiba stressed the importance of a timely resignation to prevent party division, explaining it was necessary for the national interest given recent domestic challenges.
- The ruling coalition's failure to secure a majority in the upper house has increased political instability in Japan.
268 Articles
268 Articles
Why Another Japanese Prime Minister Resigned—and What Comes Next
Less than a year after taking office, Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba announced Sunday that he would step down from the country’s top office. “I always said that I wouldn’t cling to this post, and would decide to resign at an appropriate time after doing what I needed to do,” Ishiba said during a news conference, adding that while it was a “painful” decision to make, “now is the time” for him to “pass the baton,” after securing a tariff …
The Japanese Prime Minister announced yesterday the resignation after weeks of tensions with the members of the Liberal Democratic Party, in difficulty in the face of the loss of consensus among conservative voters. Several candidates have already come forward pointing out the will to succeed Ishiba in the party presidency, but remains the node of government leadership without a majority in parliament.
Japan’s Prime Minister to Resign
“Japan’s prime minister said he would resign, leaving his successor an inbox bulging with challenges including a relationship with the U.S. strained by tariffs and voter anger over sliding living standards,” the Wall Street Journal reports. “The downfall of Shigeru Ishiba, who led Japan for less than a year before his party turned on him over a run of election defeats, is the latest installment in a global drama that has seen mainstream parties …
Asia markets advance, Nikkei soars on strong GDP; PM Ishiba resigns
Asia stock mostly rises on Monday, Japanese stocks led the gains after strong economic growth figures were released, despite the unexpected resignation of Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba. Steel rebar futures held near CNY 3,060 per tonne on Monday,
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