TOKYO — A record nine candidates are running in Japan’s ruling party election Friday to replace outgoing Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.
A former defense minister who is a longtime veteran, the relatively young son of a popular former prime minister and the economic security minister who would be the country’s first woman prime minister are considered top contenders.
No candidate is likely to win a majority in the first round, so the top two vote-getters will advance to a second round to be held immediately after the first on Friday afternoon.
Here are the candidates:
Ishiba, a 67-year-old former banker, is running in the leadership race for a fifth time and said this will be his “final battle.”
First elected to parliament in 1986, he has served as defense minister, agriculture minister and other key Cabinet and party posts.
Despite his longstanding popularity among voters, the outspoken idealist has struggled to win enough support from fellow party lawmakers.
But now, Ishiba’s experience, stability and expertise is increasingly considered a strength for the party as it prepares to face the main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan’s new leader, former Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, a veteran known for gripping speeches.
Considered a defense policy expert, Ishiba has proposed an Asian version of the NATO military alliance and a more equal Japan-U.S. security alliance. Ishiba is a supporter of Taiwan’ s democracy. He calls for an establishment of a disaster management agency in one of the world’s most disaster-prone country.
Ishiba vows to push for more diversity and gender equality. He supports a revision to a 19th century civil code requiring married couples to choose one of their surnames, which has caused most women to adopt their husbands’ surname. Moves to change the code have stalled for decades due to the LDP’s sole opposition.
Ishiba also supports legalizing same-sex marriage.
Koizumi, the son of popular Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, has been considered a potential candidate for the top position since he was elected to parliament in 2009 and at 43 would be Japan’s youngest prime minister.
Considered a political blue blood, he has been popular despite his relative lack of experience, and is backed by a former prime minister, Yoshihide Suga. But some of his popularity has eroded as policy debates have heated up, displaying his lack of expertise.
Koizumi has vowed to push reforms that would create more choices in careers and life paths. In an attempt to promote paternity leave, he took two weeks off when his first child was born in 2020. Koizumi also supports allowing a duel surname option for married couples, an option that is now supported by the country’s powerful business lobby but opposed by conservatives in the LDP.
His policy proposal of easing regulations on dismissing workers as a way of promoting a flexible labor market has stirred controversy because it was seen as a lack of protection of labor rights.
He said he would further strengthen the Japan-U.S. alliance and expand a cooperation network with other like-minded nations to deter China’s growing influence. He regularly visits Tokyo’s controversial Yasukuni Shrine, seen by Asian neighbors as a symbol of Japan’s wartime militarism.
As environment minister in 2019, Koizumi made his international debut at a United Nations summit, saying “a big-scale issue like climate change has got to be fun, it’s got to be cool, and it’s got to be sexy, too.” His choice of language was criticized as shallow.
Koizumi holds a master’s degree in political science from Columbia University.
Takaichi, 63, is the economic security minister and is making her second bid to become Japan’s first female leader. A protégé of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, she is a staunch conservative and attracts the right wing.
In the 2021 party leadership vote, she finished third in a runoff.
Takaichi has vowed to fortify Japan’s resilience to natural disasters and security risks by bolstering food security, supply chains and military capability. She calls for strengthening cyber and space defense, and has proposed the creation of a Cabinet-level intelligence bureau.
She has stressed economic growth over fiscal discipline as a key pillar of her policies.
A regular visitor to Yasukuni, Takaichi is known as a revisionist who downplays Japan’s wartime atrocities, and has called for a tougher stance on China.
Her ties to Abe faction membes who have been implicated in a slush fund scandal have been seen as a potential weakness.
Taikaichi opposes same-sex marriage and the proposal to allow married women to keep their maiden name, and supports the imperial family’s male-only succession. Her support for traditions considered paternalistic have been cited by critics as bad for women’s advancement.
After serving as a newscaster for a Japanese TV station, Takaichi was elected to parliament in 1993 and has also served as minister of internal affairs and gender equality. She has said her role model is Margaret Thatcher.
Yoshimasa Hayashi, 63, is chief Cabinet secretary and a former foreign minister who is known as Kishida’s confidante and for his all-round policy expertise.
Takayuki Kobayashi, 49, a former economic security minister, is a rising policy guru among the younger generations and a conservative who backed Takaichi in 2021.
Toshimitsu Motegi, 67, is the LDP’s secretary general who has served as foreign minister and trade minister and who is known as a tough negotiator.
Yoko Kamikawa, 71, is the foreign minister. She is a Harvard-educated former think tank analyst known as low-key and dilligent, and has pushed a U.N. initiative of “women, peace and security.”
Taro Kono, 61, is the digital minister who is known as a maverick for criticizing party policies, but has reversed his opposition to nuclear energy citing growing power demands for data centers and AI.
Katsunobu Kato, 68, is a former health minister who was close to Abe and shares his conservative views. His campaign policies include seeking to double income.