‘Japanese-first’ party Sanseito denies ties with Russia

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(FILES) This file photo taken on July 3, 2025 shows Sanseito Party secretary general Sohei Kamiya delivering a campaign speech ahead of the July 20 upper house elections in the town of Kunitomi, Miyazaki prefecture. The head of the populist Sanseito party enjoying growing suppost in Japan denied ties to Russia, after one of its candidate for the July 20 national elections gave Moscow's state-run media Sputnik an interview. Asked if the party has any special ties with Russia, Sanseito head Sohei Kamiya told an internet news programme on July 15, 2025 that "we don't. Not at all". (Photo by JIJI Press / AFP) / Japan OUT

Sanseito party chief Sohei Kamiya delivering a campaign speech in Miyazaki prefecture ahead of the July 20 Upper House elections.

PHOTO: AFP

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Tokyo – A populist party surging in the polls ahead of the July 20 national elections in Japan has denied any ties to Russia, after one of its candidates gave an interview to Moscow state media.

Japanese politics has long been dominated by the centre-right Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), with populist groups remaining on the fringes.

But the right-wing Sanseito party is riding a wave of popular support for its inflammatory “Japanese-first” platform, including opposition to globalism, immigration and foreign capital.

Opinion polls suggest it could win more than 10 Upper House seats, up from two now, in an election where Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s coalition risks losing its majority.

Sanseito’s latest controversy surrounds a rookie candidate known only as Saya, who gave Russia’s Sputnik news agency an interview that was then published on its Japanese edition’s X account on July 14.

The sudden appearance on Sputnik sparked a storm of confusion that fuelled speculation on social media that Sanseito was Russia-friendly.

Asked if the party had any special ties with Moscow, Sanseito head Sohei Kamiya told an internet news programme on July 15: “We don’t. Not at all.

“Not with Russia, China or America. We don’t. We keep balanced diplomacy with any country.”

Mr Kamiya added: “To say we’re pro-Russia just because she appeared on Sputnik... I think that’s just too simplistic.”,

Kamiya attributed Saya’s Sputnik appearance to “human error”, saying he had no knowledge this was being organised.

He clarified that a staff member with no authority had told Ms Saya without prior consultation with the party headquarters that she was allowed to accept Sputnik’s interview request.

Sanseito’s stance on Russia has come under scrutiny before, after Mr Kamiya said Moscow should not be held entirely responsible for the war in Ukraine.

“Russia’s military invasion was of course bad, but there are forces in the US that drove Russia into doing that,” he said on July 15.

“So I said once that it’s not fair to say Russia is the only bad guy here, and then people began saying I’m pro-Russia”, he added.

Japanese Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Kazuhiko Aoki said on July 16 that “Japan is also becoming a target” of foreign election interference through social media and other means, according to local media reports.

The European Union has banned Sputnik along with other Russian state media for “disinformation and information manipulation”.

The news agency has also been sanctioned by the United States. AFP

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