Shigeru Ishiba, who becomes Japan’s prime minister on Tuesday after winning the ruling party’s leadership vote, is a seasoned lawmaker known for his in-depth security policy knowledge.
A former defence minister, Ishiba’s push to boost the military and call for the creation of an Asian NATO could rile Beijing, but he is careful with his words concerning China.
He argues that Japan’s military should be able to take a stronger response when territorial airspace or waters are breached. Currently a warning shot is the only option, and China is “well aware” of that, he has said.
Although he is relatively popular with the public, Ishiba had four failed bids to lead his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), including a 2012 try against his arch-rival Shinzo Abe before prevailing this time against a nationalist.
For a long time Ishiba alienated party heavyweights with his “outspoken criticism of LDP policies under Abe”, said Yu Uchiyama, a politics professor at the University of Tokyo.
But recently he has been “vocal about the need for the LDP to turn over a new leaf when it comes to the funding scandal and other issues”, which may have worked in his favour.
He has also proposed creating a government agency in charge of disaster prevention in the earthquake-prone country that is also frequently hit by typhoons and heavy rains.
“My life’s work is security, disaster prevention, and the revitalisation of rural regions,” Ishiba said in a recent interview with the Mainichi Shimbun newspaper, pledging to focus on these issues as prime minister.
On Tuesday he will be formally elected by parliament, where the conservative LDP holds a majority.
‘Don’t repeat mistakes’
Ishiba, whose politician father was at one point a cabinet minister, grew up in the remote rural region of Tottori.
He studied law at university and became a banker before entering politics, winning his first parliamentary seat with the LDP in 1986, aged 29.
During his long career, the father of two has held several key posts including LDP secretary general and minister for agriculture.
The political veteran is a fan of trains, 1970s pop idols and making military models — including one of a Soviet aircraft carrier for the visit of a Russian defence minister.
Ishiba has pledged to boost the economy by encouraging domestic investment in the chip and AI sectors among other policies, such as using nuclear power alongside renewables to fuel the resource-poor country.
He supports the Bank of Japan’s exit from its longstanding unorthodox monetary easing policies — championed by Abe — and has said “there is room for raising the corporate tax”.
The money raised by this tax hike will help the government in its existing plan to ramp up defence spending to the NATO standard of two percent of GDP by 2027, according to Ishiba.
He aims to raise Japan’s low birth rate through measures including a review of the country’s notoriously long working hours and expanding support for parents, and wants to fight rural depopulation by revitalising regional economies.
Ishiba has said he is uniquely qualified for the job because he has experienced many setbacks when tackling tough social issues, such as agriculture reforms.
“I have always asked myself why and how things didn’t always go well. I don’t want future generations to repeat the same mistakes,” he said in a debate last week.