Sanae Takaichi leads LDP to victory in 2026 Japanese election

Sanae Takaichi leads LDP to victory in 2026 Japanese election

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Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Districts and proportional representation districts

The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has won the Japanese general election. The House of Representatives includes 465 seats, each with a member. For a party to fully control the House, it needs an outright majority of 233 seats. The LDP won 316 seats, giving the party a supermajority, the first time since World War II. The LDP leader, Sanae Takaichi, strengthened her mandate as the Prime Minister of Japan. The leaders of the Centrist Reform Alliance (Chūdō) (the main opposition party), Yoshihiko Noda and Tetsuo Saito, expressed their intent to resign after their defeat.

Chūdō lost more than two-thirds of its seats, dropping from 167 to 49. Experienced Chūdō candidates Jun Azumi, the secretary-general, Yukio Edano, and Ichirō Ozawa lost to LDP candidates Chisato Morishita, Yutaka Ihara, and Takashi Fujiawara, respectively. However, the 28 candidates of Komeito, which formed Chūdō with the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan prior to the election, all won seats, 4 more than before. There were concerns over Komeito’s prospects after its break with the LDP in October 2025.

The LDP attracted voters with Takaichi’s personal popularity and a strategy of promising populist spending, enthusiastic nationalism, and genuine engagement with younger voters on social media. A clip of Takaichi drumming with South Korean president Lee Jae Myung has gone viral, among others. Her manifesto emphasized tighter regulations on immigration, foreign ownership of Japanese land, and failures to pay tax and health insurance by foreign nationals. This has attracted criticism over its divisiveness. Businesses have expressed skepticism about the effectiveness of her proposed economic policy due to the national debt of Japan. Following the election, Takaichi was seen as being in a position to further escalate the 2025–2026 China–Japan diplomatic crisis and erode pacifism by amending the Constitution of Japan.

The new session of the House will begin on February 18, 2026.

2026 Japanese general election (constituency)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LDPSanae Takaichi27,789,18349.23+10.77
ChūdōYoshihiko Noda and Tetsuo Saito12,209,68621.63 (as CDP and Komeito)-8.73
DPPYuichiro Tamaki4,243,2817.52+3.19
SanseitōSohei Kamiya3,924,2216.95+4.45
IshinHirofumi Yoshimura and Fumitake Fujita3,742,1606.63-4.52
JCPTomoko Tamura2,283,8854.05-2.76
GZN–YukokuKazuhiro Haraguchi and Takashi Kawamura354,6170.63New
ReiwaTaro Yamamoto255,4960.45-0.35
Team MiraiTakahiro Anno156,8530.28New
SDPMizuho Fukushima148,6660.26-47.52
CPJNaoki Hyakuta97,7530.17-37.27
OthersN/A66,3080.12N/A
IndependentN/A1,174,6092.08N/A
Total votes56,446,718100.00+4.03
Registered voters/turnout103,880,74954.34+0.50
2026 Japanese general election (proportional)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LDPSanae Takaichi21,026,13936.72+10.00
ChūdōYoshihiko Noda and Tetsuo Saito10,438,80118.23 (as CDP and Komeito)-13.90
DPPYuichiro Tamaki5,572,9519.73-1.59
IshinHirofumi Yoshimura and Fumitake Fujita4,943,3318.63-0.73
SanseitōSohei Kamiya4,260,6207.44+4.01
Team MiraiTakahiro Anno3,813,7496.66New
JCPTomoko Tamura2,519,8074.40-1.76
ReiwaTaro Yamamoto1,672,4992.92-4.06
CPJNaoki Hyakuta1,455,5632.54+27.05
GZN–YukokuKazuhiro Haraguchi and Takashi Kawamura814,8741.42New
SDPMizuho Fukushima728,6011.27-22.04
OthersN/A13,0140.02N/A
Total votes57,259,949100.00+4.97
Registered voters/turnout103,880,74955.12+1.28

Category:Elections
Category:Politics and conflicts
Category:OTHER RELEVANT CATEGORIES


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