Jiji Press reports that governing Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) President Sanae Takaichi is seeking individual meetings with the leaders of the three main opposition parties on Wednesday, 15 October, as she seeks to gain support to ensure her election as prime minister. Meetings have/are taking place today between officials from the conservative LDP, as well as the liberal Constitutional Democratic Party (CDP), the libertarian-federalist Japan Innovation Party (Ishin), and the conservative populist Democratic Party for the People (DPFP).
- For the LDP's Takaichi, her tasks are clear: secure the support of at least one opposition party to ensure her election as prime minister in the 21 October extraordinary Diet session, and ensure that she has the requisite support to govern as a minority administration.
- A 'grand coalition' with the CDP would comfortably cross the majority thresholds in both chambers, but given the CDP's position as the main opposition and major policy differences, this is the least likely scenario.
- Gaining the backing of just one of Ishin or the DPFP would effectively secure Takaichi's elevation to PM. The mainstream opposition parties combined seat total would be short of the LDP plus Ishin/DPFP, and there is little-to-no chance of the minor far-left and far-right parties uniting behind a single candidate, meaning Takaichi would win in a run-off.
- The more difficult task would come in governing. Either the LDP governs as a single-party minority, relying on opposition support on a bill-by-bill basis, or seeks a coalition with both Ishin and the DPFP in order to secure a majority in both chambers.