Japan election results: Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba to be removed soon? Question rises after ruling coalition loses Sunday’s vote

Angry voters in inflation turned into the first Japanese first “Sanseito, other parties that provided strong gains with the” anti-globalist “driving of US President Donald Trump’s agenda.
Delme comes only months after Ishiba’s coalition lost its majority in the lower house, and was subjected to LDP’s worst consequences in 15 years.
Ishiba, 68-year-old, won the LDP leadership in September-a “cow”, which was seen as a couple of hands in the second attempt, was strictly lipmed to come late on Sunday.
“This is a difficult situation and we have to take it very humble and seriously,” the publisher told the publisher. He said. When asked about his future, he just said that he could not “speak slightly.”
“We can’t do anything until we see the final results, but we want to be very aware of our responsibility,” Ishiba added. If it was going, it was unclear who has needed opposition support in both rooms since 2000. Tsukuba told AFP.
After years of stagnant or falling prices, consumers in the fourth largest economy of the world since Russia’s 2022 Ukrainian invasion have been bored of inflation.
In particular, the price of rice has doubled and despite the state grades, he squeezed many household budgets.
Not helping, a LDP financing scandal and the USA if there is no trade agreement with the US due to biting the US tariffs.
Japanese imports are already subject to 10 percent tariff, while the automobile industry, which constitutes eight percent of the jobs, is embracing a 25 percent tax.
The weak export data, which showed that the US automatic deliveries fell last week, was afraid that Japan could turn into a technical recession.
Although Ishiba had an early meeting with Trump in February and sent the trade ambassador to Washington seven times, no agreement was made.
LDP and Komeito were in 2010 when the majority in the upper house could not win, and in 2007 fell below the threshold.
This was followed by a rare government change in 2009, directed by Japan’s Democratic Party for three years.
Today, the opposition is torn and the parties have a weak chance of forming an alternative government.
The populist opposition party Sansito wants “more strict rules and limits” on immigration, opposes “globalism” and “radical” gender policies and wants to rethink about carbon and vaccines.
Last week, a candidate was forced to reject connections with Moscow, who supported populist parties elsewhere after interviewed by the Russian state media.

