This week Japan’s prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, called a snap election. She will dissolve parliament on 23 January with Japan expecting to head to the polls on 8 February. A Monash expert is available to talk about the snap election and what it could mean for Japan and politics in the region.
Available to comment:
Associate Professor Charles Crabtree, Senior Lecturer, School of Social Sciences, Faculty of Arts
Contact: +1 720 236 0778 or [email protected]
The following comments can be attributed to Senior Lecturer Crabtree:
“Takaichi has called a snap election for 8 February, hoping to translate her striking popularity into electoral wins for the Liberal Democratic Party. While her approval ratings hover around 70 per cent in many polls, it's not clear that public support for her will translate into additional seats for her party, which remains broadly unpopular.
“There's some danger that her political gambit here will backfire, resulting in further Liberal Democratic Party losses, just as it did under the previous prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, and as happened when French President Emmanuel Macron called an early election in 2024. The outcome of this election will likely have considerable effect on Japan's fiscal and national security policies.”
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