City
Epaper

Japan ruling party's junior ally Komeito to end coalition

By IANS | Updated: October 10, 2025 15:20 IST

Tokyo, Oct 10 Japan's Komeito said Friday that the political party plans to terminate its coalition with the ...

Open in App

Tokyo, Oct 10 Japan's Komeito said Friday that the political party plans to terminate its coalition with the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and will not vote for new LDP chief Sanae Takaichi as Prime Minister, citing differences over their response to political funding issues, local media reported.

Komeito leader Tetsuo Saito told Takaichi in a meeting on Friday afternoon that his party will leave the coalition government, ending a partnership between the two parties that has lasted more than 25 years, public broadcaster NHK reported.

Saito and Takaichi discussed their coalition framework based on three issues -- views on history, including visits to the war-linked Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo, Komeito's concerns over potentially exclusionary policies toward foreigners, and political funding reforms, Kyodo News reported.

But the two leaders could not agree on the third issue, with Komeito demanding more efforts to get to the bottom of the funds scandal and tighter controls of political donations by businesses and organisations, Xinhua news agency reported quoting the Kyodo News.

Saito said at a news conference that efforts to tackle politics and money are Komeito's top priorities and that the LDP failed to provide sufficient answers regarding political funding issues.

Komeito was urging the LDP to accept its proposal to have stricter restrictions on political donations by businesses, which also caps donations to a single party to 20 million yen (about $130,862) annually to limit their influence on policymaking, although there is currently no cap under the law.

The LDP, by far the top beneficiary of corporate donations, is seeking to avoid restrictions on such donations to individual lawmakers.

"We cannot write the name of Sanae Takaichi in a vote for a new prime minister," Saito added that Komeito will not vote for her in the upcoming parliamentary session to choose the country's new leader.

For Takaichi to become Japan's first female prime minister, she must be appointed by the Diet, Japan's parliament. Komeito's breakup means the LDP will need to court opposition parties to vote Takaichi in as Japan's next prime minister.

The smaller Komeito initially formed a coalition government with the LDP from 1999 to 2009 and they later regained power together in 2012 and have held it since.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketNew Zealand Register First Win in Women’s Cricket World Cup 2025 with 100-Run Victory Over Bangladesh

Other SportsWomen's World Cup: Devine, Halliday, and bowlers script New Zealand's 100-run win over Bangladesh

NationalCPI-M & Trinamool 'disconnected from people, confined to social media posts': Tripura CM

AurangabadFormer CM had not granted a single pie to farmers: CM

NationalKerala: Congress MP, UDF workers injured as Police resort to lathi charge and tear gas

International Realted Stories

InternationalYoung, old queue in Nepal for voter registration, expecting fresher mandate from March polls

InternationalMigratory bird slender-billed curlew extinct now

International"Ask British, Soviet Union, US and NATO; don't play games with us": Afghan minister Muttaqi warns Pak amid blasts in Kabul

InternationalWhite House hits out at Nobel Committee for overlooking Trump for peace prize

InternationalNew US Ambassador Sergio Gor begins four-day visit to India