Sanae Takaichi wins historic vote to become Japan’s first female prime minister

Takaichi’s election shows what is possible for Japanese girls to achievepublished at 05:58 BST

Mariko Oi
Presenter, Asia Specific podcast

Takaichi smiling with her mouth closed. She is wearing a blue blazer and a white pearl necklaceImage source, Reuters

While many of Japan’s feminists may not be celebrating the country’s
first female prime minister for her policies, I believe Takaichi can still be a role model that young Japanese
girls could look up to – it shows them you don’t need to be an old man to be a leader of
their country.

As Kathy Matsui, who coined the term Womenomics, says, you cannot
be what you cannot see.

In a country where so many prime ministers and lawmakers are sons,
grandsons or even great grandsons of politicians, there is a certain level of
respect for her effort to have climbed up the political ladder without having a family connection.

It
is well known that Takaichi’s parents didn’t want to send her to a university
because she was a girl – and that the young Takaichi had to earn her own tuition fees.

She has also talked openly about her struggles to have biological
children but has helped to raise three children from her husband’s previous marriage.

Her most recent challenge has been to take care of her husband who recently had
a stroke.

Those personal experiences have and will most certainly shape her
policies.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Vance Travels to Israel to Try to Bolster Gaza Deal

new video loaded: Vance Travels to Israel to Try to Bolster Gaza Deal transcript Back transcript Vance Travels to Israel to Try to Bolster Gaza Deal Vice President JD Vance headed to Israel to ramp up support for the fragile cease-fire deal. Concerns have grown that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel could dismantle the

Smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip.(REUTERS)

Why Gaza’s “eternal” ceasefire is holding—for now

ETERNITY IS NOT what it used to be. When Donald Trump visited the Middle East on October 13th to sign the Gaza ceasefire, he spoke of “peace for all eternity” in the region. Less than a week later, a clash between Israel and Hamas in southern Gaza left dozens of people dead. Some Israeli officials

chart visualization

UK Government borrowing surges to highest September figure in five years

Public sector net borrowing rose to £20.2 billion for the month, £1.6 billion higher than in September 2024, the Office for National Statistics said. Rising debt interest costs, pay rises and inflation increasing the Government’s day-to-day running costs, and inflation-linked benefit increases all helped push up the Government’s deficit last month. This more than offset

Everything You Need To Know Ahead Of Earnings

Household products company WD-40 (NASDAQ:WDFC) will be reporting results this Wednesday after market hours. Here’s what investors should know. WD-40 missed analysts’ revenue expectations by 2.3% last quarter, reporting revenues of $156.9 million, up 1.2% year on year. It was a slower quarter for the company, with full-year revenue guidance missing analysts’ expectations and a

Japan makes history as Takaichi set to become the country’s first woman prime minister

Sanae Takaichi created history on Oct. 21, winning Japan’s parliamentary vote to become the country’s first women prime minister. Philip Fong | Afp | Getty Images Sanae Takaichi on Tuesday created history, winning Japan’s parliamentary vote to become the country’s first woman prime minister, with domestic stock markets cheering her ascendancy. Takaichi garnered 237 votes