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Komeito Quits Japan's Ruling Coalition, Jeopardizing Takaichi's Path to Premiership

The split over LDP funding reforms leaves the party short of majorities in both chambers.

Overview

  • Komeito ended its 26-year partnership with the Liberal Democratic Party after talks failed to produce acceptable commitments on probing the slush‑fund scandal and tightening corporate donations.
  • Komeito leader Tetsuo Saito said the party will not vote for Sanae Takaichi as prime minister without a coalition agreement, though it intends to cooperate on budgets and certain legislation.
  • Without Komeito, the LDP is 37 seats short in the Lower House and 25 short in the Upper House, forcing Takaichi to seek support from opposition parties or navigate a minority path.
  • Takaichi’s appointment of Koichi Hagiuda, a lawmaker sanctioned over unreported political funds, further strained negotiations as money-in-politics remained the core sticking point.
  • Markets signaled higher political risk as the yen weakened and the Nikkei fell about 1%, and local reports indicated the parliamentary vote on a new premier may slip to the week of Oct. 20.