How Japan’s first female leader won over disillusioned young voters

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Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's smarter use of social media may be contributing to her popularity.

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's smarter use of social media may be contributing to her popularity.

PHOTO: AFP

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Three months into her tenure as Japan’s first female prime minister, Ms Sanae Takaichi is connecting with younger voters in a way her predecessors failed.

She plays KPop Demon Hunters’ Golden on the drums with South Korea’s President Lee Jae Myung and takes selfies with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.

In the evenings, she prefers to sharpen her policy knowledge at home, rather than wining and dining Japan’s old-guard business elite behind closed doors. From her handbags to her pink pens,

orders are surging for items that have unexpectedly captured the zeitgeist

.

So far, her PR strategy of presenting herself as different seems to have struck a chord with Japan’s youth, likely clawing back some of the votes lost to opposition parties with savvier social media reach in the Upper House election in 2025.

The question for Ms Takaichi is how much that support will carry through in

closely watched Lower House election

on Feb 8

.

“It feels like Japan has changed,” said 21-year-old university student Genki Takahashi at a campaign rally for Ms Takaichi on Feb 3, noting that all past prime ministers were men.

“We have gone from tradition to innovation.” 

In some recent polls, support for Ms Takaichi among those aged between 18 and 29 is nearly 90 per cent.

A survey by public broadcaster NHK taken right after Ms Takaichi took office put her approval rating at 77 per cent among those aged 18 to 39, compared with 38 per cent and 51 per cent respectively for her immediate predecessors, Mr Shigeru Ishiba and Mr Fumio Kishida, when they began their terms.

“I think she is really good at marketing herself,” said Mr Kenshiro Kawasaki, a 24-year-old Takaichi supporter.

Younger people are particularly sensitive to politicians’ image strategy, and voters more broadly were getting tired of the last few prime ministers, he added.

Some supporters have even coined a new term for their fandom: Sanakatsu, derived from oshikatsu, a Japanese word usually reserved for cheering on pop idols.

Homemaker Hitomi Sasaki was also listening to Ms Takaichi speak on Feb 3 as she waved a sign saying “Thank you, Sanae”.

“She has conviction, her policies are clear and she has a strong will to protect Japan,” said Ms Sasaki. “I am fully behind her.”

Ms Takaichi’s smarter use of social media may be contributing to her popularity.

According to an analysis conducted by political data website Senkyo.com in November 2025, views for YouTube videos related to Ms Takaichi have far exceeded those for individual political parties between July 2025 and November 2025, particularly surging when she became prime minister.

When she took office in October 2025, YouTube interest in Ms Takaichi was triple the scale seen for Sanseito during its popularity surge in the summer’s Upper House election.

That suggests her clearer message on fiscal spending and national security, and her sharper social media use may be stealing back support from far-right Sanseito and the “raise take-home pay” messaging of the Democratic Party for the People – parties that had been jumping ahead in recent elections at the expense of Ms Takaichi’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party.

“Younger voters respond more to a simple, direct pitch and a leader who can push policies forward,” said Dr Masaki Hata, an associate professor at Osaka University of Economics.

“Older generations tend to prefer consensus-driven messaging.”

Other Cabinet members have taken the hint. Defence Minister Shinjiro Koizumi has posted photos of working out with US counterpart Pete Hegseth on Instagram, while Economy Minister Ryosei Akazawa took his trade negotiation partner Howard Lutnick on a whistle-stop tour around the historic Tokyo district of Asakusa.

Her personal narrative is also a big part of her appeal.

The daughter of an office worker and a police officer from the western prefecture of Nara, Ms Takaichi built her career without the benefit of a wealthy background or connections to politics.

For a generation that feels far removed from Japan’s boom years, her story of reaching Japan’s highest office through diligence and grit, rather than inherited privilege, has particular appeal. 

“The fact that Takaichi managed to become prime minister through hard work provides a role model for young people who want to believe that it actually pays off,” said Ms Waka Ikeda, a researcher at the Youth Research Institute in Budapest, where she is studying cross-cultural patterns in youth and family policies.

Japan’s political class is unusually dynastic. About 30 per cent of Japanese lawmakers are hereditary politicians, far higher than in the US and Germany, where the share is below 10 per cent, according to a book by Dr Daniel Smith, an associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania.

But Ms Takaichi is not one of them, and has leaned into a work-first image.

Her pledge to “work, work, work, work and work” during her post-victory speech and a recent 3am meeting she called to study up on policies have been criticised, but have also projected an image of meritocracy over schmoozing with the old guard.

Her message of work over privilege is also blended with a bid for a stronger Japan, echoing former prime minister Shinzo Abe, who also enjoyed support from younger voters.

Her push for aggressive spending and large-scale investment also tracks the Abenomics playbook: monetary easing, flexible fiscal policy and a growth strategy.

Dr Hata said: “Some young voters see Takaichi as Abe’s successor and back her for that reason.”

Still, it is unclear whether her popularity among young voters will directly translate into votes for her ruling coalition.

Even among younger voters, support for the LDP remains around 30 per cent, underscoring the gap between approval for Ms Takaichi herself and backing for her party.

“I am looking closely at how younger people are supporting the Takaichi administration lately,” said 21-year-old Masato Iwanaka, who said he has not decided who he will vote for yet.

“I want parties to learn from each other’s good parts and do things in a hybrid way.”

Turnout is another hurdle, with youth participation typically far lower than among older generations. The Feb 8 vote,

held in cold weather

and overlapping with exam season and spring break, could further bring down voter turnout.

Still, Dr Hata said youth interest in politics is rising, suggesting that those views may be overblown.

In the July 2025 Upper House election, turnout among people in their late 20s climbed to 52 per cent, up about 14 percentage points from national races in 2022 and 2024.

“I have been supporting her since the last party leadership election,” said 28-year-old Miku Tobe, who was listening to Ms Takaichi give a campaign speech. “I really feel like she is thinking seriously about Japan.”

Compared with the DPP and Sanseito, Youth Research Institute’s Ikeda said “the LDP was not particularly good at using social media”.

“Many young people in Japan are tired of being called out for their views or being cancelled,” she added, explaining that many see liberals as being overly politically correct, making them more receptive to messaging from Japan’s rising right wing.

Still, support fuelled by social media can be fragile, raising the risk that Ms Takaichi’s popularity may prove short-lived. As social media use spreads, public attention and opinion can become more volatile, with larger swings unfolding more quickly than before, according to a project by the Oxford Internet Institute.

Said Ms Ikeda: “Young people are quick to jump on, but just as quick to move on.” BLOOMBERG

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