Japan’s first female prime minister, Takaichi Sanae, laid out an ambitious conservative agenda after winning her office in a parliamentary vote on Tuesday.
Her nascent administration also signaled a desire to build closer defense ties with the United States.
Much of Takaichi’s agenda lines up with her longstanding political beliefs, as an admirer of global conservative icons like Margaret Thatcher, and a protege of the late Prime Minister Abe Shinzo. She is also being prodded to make policy concessions by her LDP party’s last-minute alliance with the Japan Innovation Party (commonly known as Ishin, which means “renewal”).
Ishin took over as LDP’s coalition partner on Monday, securing the votes Takaichi needed to become prime minister after the departure of Komeito, LDP’s partner f