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LDP, Japan Innovation Party effectively strike policy deal for coalition

The move marks a new phase in Japan's multiparty politics following the Komeito party's departure from its 26-year alliance with the LDP.

Kyodo
Sun, October 19, 2025 Published on Oct. 19, 2025 Published on 2025-10-19T09:22:16+07:00

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Ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) president Sanae Takaichi (right) and head of the major opposition Japan Innovation Party Hirofumi Yoshimura attending a meeting at the Diet in Tokyo on Oct. 15, 2025. Japan's top three opposition leaders met on Oct. 15 to seek a unified candidate for prime minister in their bid to oust the ruling party from power, only to find there were still “gaps“ between them. Ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) president Sanae Takaichi (right) and head of the major opposition Japan Innovation Party Hirofumi Yoshimura attending a meeting at the Diet in Tokyo on Oct. 15, 2025. Japan's top three opposition leaders met on Oct. 15 to seek a unified candidate for prime minister in their bid to oust the ruling party from power, only to find there were still “gaps“ between them. (AFP/Jiji Press)

T

he ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the major opposition Japan Innovation Party (JIP) have effectively agreed to form a coalition, with the latter offering support from outside the Cabinet, senior officials from both parties said on Saturday.

JIP leader Hirofumi Yoshimura and LDP chief Sanae Takaichi are expected to sign a coalition agreement on Monday. The move marks a new phase in Japan's multiparty politics following the Komeito party's departure from its 26-year alliance with the LDP.

With the JIP planning to vote for Takaichi, elected LDP president on Oct. 4, in Tuesday's parliamentary vote to select the next prime minister, her election, which would make her Japan's first female premier, is virtually assured.

But she is set to face a rocky road ahead in advancing her largely conservative policies, as her government would still fall short of a majority of 233 in the powerful 465-member House of Representatives even after the LDP and the JIP join hands.

Days after centrist Komeito, referring to itself as a "peace party," decided to quit the coalition with the LDP, Takaichi and Yoshimura, who also serves as Osaka governor, pledged Wednesday to begin policy talks with the possibility of creating a new government.

Senior officials from the two parties agreed Friday in Tokyo that the LDP would strive to realize the JIP's proposals to lower the consumption tax rate on food to zero from the current level of up to 10 percent, and to abolish corporate and organizational donations.

The LDP also accepted Yoshimura's demand to cut the number of Diet seats, which he has called a "nonnegotiable condition" for entering the coalition. The parties plan to submit a related bill to the extraordinary parliamentary session to be convened on Tuesday.

At their first policy meeting, Takaichi asked the JIP to join the Cabinet. But some JIP lawmakers said it would be better to wait until policy progress becomes clear, making it unlikely the party will take Cabinet posts beyond an advisory role to the prime minister.

The two parties will set up a consultative body to carry out the coalition deal. As part of the ruling bloc, the JIP will participate in prior discussions on government bills, with Yoshimura saying the goal is to put policies into action, rather than seek Cabinet slots.

On the issue of reducing the consumption tax on food to zero, the LDP and the JIP confirmed that they will continue talks, while aiming to end corporate and organizational donations by September 2027, when Takaichi's tenure as party president expires.

The LDP has entrusted Takaichi with handling the coalition matter, while the JIP will hold an executive board gathering in Osaka on Sunday and a plenary meeting of lawmakers the following day before giving final approval to the agreement with the LDP.

In the lower house, the LDP holds 196 seats, the main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan 148, the JIP 35, and Komeito 24. If the LDP, the biggest force in parliament, and the JIP form a coalition, their combined seats would total 231.

The CDPJ is arranging to support its leader, Yoshihiko Noda, a former prime minister. Even if a runoff is held in the Diet's prime ministerial vote between the top two candidates, Takaichi is sure to win, as other parties apparently intend to back their own leaders.

Komeito, supported by Japan's largest lay Buddhist organization Soka Gakkai, whose membership has declined amid an aging population, has criticized the LDP over its high-profile slush fund scandal that has eroded the ruling camp's popularity across the board.

Meanwhile, Yuichiro Tamaki, leader of the Democratic Party for the People, which holds 27 seats in the lower house, expressed on Saturday a willingness to work with Takaichi in areas where their policies align.

"I would like to cooperate to advance policies," Tamaki told reporters in Nagasaki, where he was visiting, noting that the economic measures Takaichi advocated in the LDP presidential election overlap with his party's positions.

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