
GD POLITICS Can A Popular Prime Minister Fix What Ails Japan?
Apr 2, 2026
Kenneth Mori McElwain, a comparative politics professor at the University of Tokyo and editor-in-chief of Social Science Japan Journal. He discusses Sanae Takaichi’s surprising landslide and the messy politics behind it. Topics include constitutional debate over Article 9, demographic and labor challenges, rising inflation versus stagnant wages, urban–rural divides, and the shifting balance of trust in institutions.
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Guest Background Explains Cross-Cultural View
- Kenneth Mori McElwain describes his mixed Irish-Japanese upbringing and international-school background in Tokyo.
- He lived in Japan and Ireland, then spent 20 years in the U.S. for university, graduate school, and teaching.
Urban-Rural Divide Powers The LDP
- Electoral politics in Japan is shaped by an urban-rural divide, not just ideology: the LDP's rural-targeted redistribution preserves its base.
- Mori McElwain highlights pork-barrel spending and transfers that keep rural prefectures aligned with the LDP.
Weak Party ID Makes Short Campaigns Decisive
- Party identification in Japan is weaker; many voters are true independents who switch votes, which makes short campaigns especially influential.
- Mori McElwain notes about 30–40% of voters are independents and campaigning is legally limited to 12 days.
