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Japan sees record number of women run in general polls across ‘male-oriented’ parties

A record number of women are running in the election but they still account for less than a quarter of candidates

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A woman walks past a billboard for the election campaign in Tokyo. A record number of women are running in the election but they still account for less than a quarter of candidates. Photo: Xinhua
Agence France-Presse
A record number of women are running in Japan’s general election this month, although they still account for less than a quarter of candidates, local media said on Wednesday.
New Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba is seeking to shore up his mandate in the October 27 vote by retaining a majority for the long-ruling Liberal Democratic Party.

Japan has never had a woman prime minister and Ishiba narrowly beat one of its few prominent female politicians, nationalist Sanae Takaichi, to the top job in a party leadership vote.

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The 1,344 lower house candidates who kicked off their campaigns on Tuesday for all 465 seats include a record 314 women, Japanese media including the Yomiuri and Asahi dailies said.

The ratio of women candidates – around 23 per cent – is also a record high, according to the Yomiuri.

Japan’s new Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba (front row, middle) and members of his cabinet at the prime minister’s official residence in Tokyo. Photo: AFP
Japan’s new Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba (front row, middle) and members of his cabinet at the prime minister’s official residence in Tokyo. Photo: AFP

Ishiba’s efforts to encourage women to run – instead of former lawmakers embroiled in a slush-fund scandal in certain cases – is one reason behind the increase, the reports said.

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