What happened Japan’s ruling coalition, led by the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), has lost its majority in parliament following a snap election over the weekend. Opposition parties secured 235 seats in the Japan's lower house, the Diet. A party needs a majority of 233 seats to govern alone.
Who said what "Voters have handed us a harsh verdict and we have to humbly accept this result," said LDP leader Shigeru Ishiba (pictured above).
The election, announced by Ishiba just three days after he was selected as new leader and before he had been officially sworn in as prime minister, was a "political gamble", said Shaimaa Khalil on the BBC, "and it backfired".
The LDP's popularity has slumped in recent months, with voters "rankled by rising prices" and the "fallout from a party slush fund scandal that helped sink previous premier Fumio Kishida", said Fortune.
What next? Japan is now "heading for a time of political instability", said Shimada Yukiko on Japan's public broadcaster NHK. The LDP will now need to look for new coalition partners, which will involve "a lot of tricky relationships to juggle". |