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(VIDEO) Sanae Takaichi Secures Historic Supermajority in Japan’s Landslide 2026 Election Victory
Conservative lawmaker Sanae Takaichi led Japan’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) to a resounding landslide victory in the February 8, 2026, general election, securing a historic supermajority of 295 seats in the 465-member House of Representatives and ending more than a year of political uncertainty that followed the LDP’s 2024 snap-election setback.
Takaichi, 65, became the first woman to lead the LDP to a national election victory as party president, capturing 312 seats when combined with its junior coalition partner Komeito (24 seats), well above the 233-seat supermajority threshold needed to control both chambers of the Diet and push through legislation with minimal opposition interference. The result marked one of the largest swings in postwar Japanese electoral history and handed Takaichi a clear mandate to implement her hawkish security agenda, economic reforms and traditional-values platform.
Voter turnout reached 57.8%, up slightly from the 2024 low of 55.9%, reflecting heightened public interest in the LDP’s comeback campaign and widespread dissatisfaction with the short-lived opposition-led coalition government that collapsed in late 2025. Preliminary results released early Monday showed the LDP winning 271 single-seat constituencies outright — a gain of 98 seats from its 2024 performance — while proportional representation added another 24 seats.
Takaichi, who assumed LDP presidency in September 2025 after a narrow internal party victory over former Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s preferred successor, campaigned on a platform of “strong Japan, secure future.” Her manifesto emphasized:
- Constitutional revision to explicitly recognize the Self-Defense Forces and expand collective self-defense rights
- Doubling defense spending to 2% of GDP by 2028
- Aggressive economic stimulus combining tax cuts, deregulation and infrastructure investment
- Promotion of traditional family values and stricter immigration controls
- Energy security through expanded nuclear power and liquefied natural gas imports
The LDP’s sweeping win reversed the dramatic losses of October 2024, when public anger over slush-fund scandals, inflation and perceived weak leadership cost the party its majority. The subsequent minority government under then-Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba relied on fragile support from smaller parties and independent lawmakers, leading to legislative gridlock and frequent no-confidence threats.
Opposition parties suffered heavy defeats. The Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (CDP), led by Yoshihiko Noda, dropped to 98 seats from 148. The Japan Innovation Party held steady at 44 seats, while Reiwa Shinsengumi and the Japanese Communist Party each lost ground. Smaller centrist and progressive groups largely collapsed, consolidating the political map into a clearer LDP-dominated landscape.
Analysts attributed the LDP’s resurgence to several factors:
- Voter fatigue with opposition disunity and inability to present a coherent alternative government
- Takaichi’s personal popularity among conservative and rural voters, bolstered by her strong performances in televised debates
- Effective use of digital campaigning and targeted social-media outreach to younger and swing voters
- Economic anxieties over inflation, yen weakness and wage stagnation that favored the LDP’s promise of immediate stimulus
- A perception that only the LDP could deliver stable governance amid regional security tensions, including North Korean missile tests and China’s military activities near Taiwan and the Senkaku Islands
Takaichi addressed supporters late Sunday at party headquarters in Tokyo’s Nagatacho district, declaring: “The Japanese people have spoken clearly. They want a strong, proud, secure Japan that protects its families and its future generations. We will not betray that trust.”
She pledged to form a new cabinet swiftly and submit a supplementary budget in March 2026 to fund immediate economic relief measures, including cash handouts to low-income households, expanded child allowances and accelerated infrastructure projects.
International reaction was mixed. U.S. officials welcomed the return of a stable LDP government committed to strengthening the U.S.-Japan alliance and increasing defense contributions. Chinese state media described the outcome as a “dangerous shift toward militarism,” while South Korean officials expressed cautious optimism that Takaichi’s administration would continue pragmatic dialogue despite her past criticism of Seoul’s historical policies.
Domestically, the result sparked debate over the speed and scope of constitutional revision. Takaichi has vowed to convene a formal review process within the first 100 days, though analysts expect the earliest possible referendum to be held no sooner than 2028 due to procedural requirements and public opinion thresholds.
The supermajority also gives Takaichi leverage over internal LDP factions. Her victory over establishment candidates in the September 2025 leadership race already weakened traditional power brokers, and the scale of the electoral win further consolidates her authority. Observers expect her to appoint a cabinet blending loyalists, policy experts and a higher proportion of women and younger lawmakers than previous administrations.
Economic markets reacted positively Monday morning, with the Nikkei 225 rising 2.1% in early trading and the yen strengthening slightly against the dollar as investors anticipated fiscal stimulus and policy predictability.
Takaichi’s personal journey adds historical weight to the victory. A former economic security minister and longtime Abe Shinzo ally, she was once considered a long-shot candidate due to her hardline views on gender roles, history textbooks and security policy. Her ability to broaden appeal — particularly among women voters concerned about inflation and child-rearing costs — proved decisive.
As she prepares to be formally elected prime minister in a special Diet session later this week, Takaichi faces immediate challenges: balancing aggressive defense buildup with fiscal discipline, navigating U.S.-China tensions, addressing Japan’s rapidly aging population and rebuilding public trust after years of scandal.
For now, however, the landslide victory gives her a rare window of political capital rarely seen in recent Japanese politics. Whether she uses that mandate to enact sweeping change or opts for incremental steps will define her premiership and Japan’s trajectory in the late 2020s.