this post was submitted on 24 Oct 2025
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Global News

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Tokyo (AFP) – Japan's conservative new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi vowed Friday to bring US ties to "new heights" with President Donald Trump, while taking a swipe at China and vowing a stricter stance on immigration in her first policy speech.

Japan's first woman premier, who so far is enjoying high poll ratings, also told a rowdy parliament that two percent of gross domestic product will be spent on defence this fiscal year, hitting the government's target two years early.

The comments came three days before Trump, who wants Tokyo and other allies to boost their military spending, is due to visit Japan on his way to crunch talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping in South Korea.

Takaichi, whose idol is Margaret Thatcher, said she would build "a relationship of trust" during Trump's visit, "elevating the Japan-US relationship to new heights".

Known before her appointment as a China hawk, Takaichi also said that the military activities of China, North Korea and Russia "have become a grave concern".

"The free, open and stable international order we have grown accustomed to is being profoundly shaken by historic shifts in the balance of power and intensifying geopolitical competition," she said.

China's foreign ministry reacted by hitting out at Japan increasing its defence budget and relaxing restrictions on arms exports.

"These moves inevitably raise serious doubts among (Japan's) Asian neighbours and the international community about whether Japan is truly committed to an exclusively defensive posture and the path of peaceful development," said spokesman Guo Jiakun.

But Takaichi also has a host of other complex issues to tackle in the coming months, including a flatlining economy and a declining population.

On Friday she said the country needed foreign workers to address labour shortages, but alluded to growing anxiety over foreigners in Japan, a country with historically low levels of immigration.

"Some illegal activities and breaches of rules by certain foreigners have created situations where members of the public feel uneasy and perceive unfairness," Takaichi said.

"While we draw a clear line from xenophobia, the government will respond resolutely to such acts," she added, saying they will enforce compliance with existing rules and examine sensitive issues such as land acquisition.

The populist Sanseito party, which calls immigration a "silent invasion", has been making gains in recent elections.

Takaichi has also appointed Kimi Onoda as minister -- as well as other areas -- for a "society of well-ordered and harmonious coexistence with foreign nationals".

The job existed before but without a minister in charge. The appointment has led to widespread false information online that Onoda was named minister for "mass deportations".

Ahead of her parliament address, Takaichi had promised to ease pressure on households, saying the cost-of-living squeeze was a priority and telling her cabinet to draw up measures to address it.

However, there was little further detail Friday on the promised economic package.

Takaichi's predecessor Shigeru Ishiba survived barely a year in office, with voters hammering the ruling party in elections partly because of rising prices.

Official data Friday showed inflation accelerated last month, with consumer prices jumping 2.9 percent in September compared with 2.7 percent in August.

Takaichi has long advocated for more government spending and easing monetary policy to spur growth, and her appointment has boosted stocks to record highs.

Since taking office, however, she has said monetary policy decisions would be left to the Bank of Japan (BoJ).

The BoJ has been "normalising" its super-easy monetary policy and inflation has long been above its target, making further interest rate hikes more likely.

But the BoJ is "concerned about the impact of US tariffs on the Japanese economy and the potential for negative spillovers to corporate profits and wage growth," said Abhijit Surya at Capital Economics.

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[–] elevenbones@piefed.social 12 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Japan just always wanting to team up with nazis lmao πŸ€¦β€β™€οΈ

[–] rozodru@pie.andmc.ca 8 points 1 day ago (2 children)

so she admits they need foreign workers but her party also calls immigration a "silent invasion".

Can't have it both ways lady unless you want to take a play book from some middle eastern countries.

The middle eastern playbook is exactly what she's hoping for.

[–] hanrahan@piefed.social 1 points 14 hours ago

Can't have it both ways lady unless you want to take a play book from some middle eastern countries.

Doesn''t have anything to to do with anything like that, aside from being in power.

Say dumb shit that apepals to dumb shits, get elected. Helps if you're an idiot because you can seem sincere in your stupiditya dn as long as you're crafty grifter, you can make bank It's the literal populist playbook.

[–] notsosure@sh.itjust.works 11 points 1 day ago (2 children)

You can’t fix stupid.

[–] village604@adultswim.fan 16 points 1 day ago

Her idol is Margaret Thatcher. She's evil, not stupid. I'm betting it won't be long before Unit 731 is back in business and targeting foreigners.

[–] vacuumflower@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

It's a moment for Japan when anyone can be stupid or not. Inflation in particular might be even good.

Rearmament is honestly long overdue, it makes them less dependent upon the US.

If they don't fix their demographics, it'll be bad anyway. And to fix demographics, things of the sort that happened in European and American 50s are needed, of the "mass housing construction and welfare state" kind, except now that'll be far more expensive.

EDIT: Not even talking about emancipation, simplification of laws and all that, things that make young people want to bring new minds into this world.

[–] DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Oh yeah, because that's what's going to be good for Japan.

A massive nationalist rearmament campaign, surrounded by the people they victimized, led by the party that denies the atrocities, as they tie their horses to a dying and aggressive empire set on making enemies of a nation that outnumbers them both three to one and has a larger economy than both by PPP.

[–] vacuumflower@lemmy.sdf.org 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Are there many parties there which don't?

Rearmament campaigns create jobs. And, especially in today's world, they don't create more risk of war.

About numbers and PPP, all that works in China's favor during prolonged peace. War has different laws.

Anyway, you might have noticed how Japan is increasingly (if that's possible LOL) nationalist and angry the last few years. They need to revitalize their economy, start fixing their demographics and do something with their old security arrangements which mean complete reliance upon US, because US is increasingly erratic. Meaning rearmament makes them more independent from US, not less.

These "new heights" are diplomacy.

[–] DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

Ah, the "they're all evils so the greater evil is fine because the low paying explosion factory worker is a job" argument.

[–] vacuumflower@lemmy.sdf.org -1 points 12 hours ago

Weapons are always needed and have to be designed, tested and mass-produced. Militaries have to be funded, manned, trained, equipped.

Yes, it's a job. In a sphere of economy just as necessary as all others.