With golfing gifts, Japan PM Takaichi invokes Abe’s legacy to forge Trump bond
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US President Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi at a bilateral meeting at Akasaka Palace in Tokyo on Oct 28.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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TOKYO - Among the gifts offered up by Japan's new premier Sanae Takaichi to US President Donald Trump in their first meeting on Oct 28 was a putter used by Mr Shinzo Abe, his golfing buddy and the country's late leader.
Displayed in a glass case alongside a gold-leaf golf ball and bag signed by Japanese major winner Hideki Matsuyama, the club was just one of a litany of references to Mr Trump’s bond with Mr Abe that underpinned ties between the countries during his first term.
It is a bond that Ms Takaichi, a protegee of Mr  Abe, who was assassinated by a lone gunman in 2022,
“I think it has significant meaning,” said Mr Masahiko Shibayama, a lawmaker who served as Mr Abe’s aide during Trump's first term, speaking about the leaders’ shared connection to the slain prime minister.
“I believe the relationship of trust between two top leaders like this is certain to lead to the strengthening of the alliance,” he said.
Coincidentally, the long-awaited trial of the man accused of fatally shooting Abe began on Oct 28 in the western city of Nara, Ms Takaichi’s hometown.
Great friend shared
Talk turned to Mr Abe as soon as Mr Trump stepped into the ornate Akasaka Palace in  central Tokyo to exchange pleasantries and pose for photos with Ms Takaichi, a hardline conservative who became  Japan's first female leader
“He was a great friend of mine and a great friend of yours,” Mr Trump said as the pair shook hands. Ms Takaichi was given her first Cabinet post in Mr Abe’s initial 2006-2007 administration and later elevated to home minister in his second 2012-2020 term.
At the start of summit talks with Mr Trump after a lavish honour guard welcome, Ms Takaichi first thanked him for his “enduring friendship” with Mr Abe and for hosting his widow Akie Abe at his Mar-a-Lago retreat shortly after Mr Trump’s election victory in 2024.
Her words were translated into English by Mr Sunao Takao, an interpreter formerly used by Mr Abe, who Mr Trump once jokingly referred to as junior prime minister.
Professor Mark Davidson, a former senior US diplomat in Japan who teaches politics at Temple University in Tokyo, said it was a smart move for Ms Takaichi to invoke Mr Abe’s memory.
“With President Trump, all politics is personal,” said Prof Davidson.
“He had a very close, warm and trusting relationship with Prime Minister Abe. I think that Prime Minister Takaichi's close ties with late Prime Minister Abe set up this relationship for success.”
Ms Takaichi and Mr Trump also signed a pair of baseball caps emblazoned with “JAPAN IS BACK”, a catchphrase first used by Mr Abe that Ms Takaichi adopted in her leadership campaign.
Mr Abe was the first foreign leader to meet Mr Trump after his 2016 victory, the start of a relationship that blossomed over several rounds of golf in the United States and Japan.
Ms Takaichi may not share the same love for golf, but she said she had watched the first few innings of a Major League Baseball game with Mr Trump before the Oct 28 formalities began.
Forging a similar bond with the leader of Japan’s key security and trade partner could help Ms Takaichi bolster her weak political position at home and help her navigate Mr Trump’s at times erratic decision-making that has wrong-footed other world leaders, analysts say.
While Ms Takaichi has seen her public support jump since becoming prime minister, her coalition government is two votes short of a majority in Parliament’s Lower House.
“This is the perfect time for her to leverage her popular support to give her the political room she needs to make small concessions to solidify this relationship,” Prof Davidson said. REUTERS

