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Japan’s ruling party projected to miss majority in election, in blow for new PM Ishiba

NHK poll shows the LDP and Komeito are set to win between 174 and 254 of the 465 seats in the lower house of Japan’s parliament

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Officials of the election administration committee open ballot boxes to count the votes for Japan’s general election in Tokyo on Sunday. Photo: AFP

Japan’s ruling coalition is set to lose its parliamentary majority, exit polls for Sunday’s general election suggested, raising uncertainty over the make-up of the government of the world’s fourth-largest economy.

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A poll by Nippon TV showed Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which has ruled Japan for almost all of its post-war history, and junior coalition partner Komeito would get 198 of the 465 seats in the lower house of Japan’s parliament.

That would be well short of the 233 needed to maintain its majority and would be its worst election result since the coalition briefly lost power in 2009.

A poll by public broadcaster NHK predicted the LDP coalition would win between 174 and 254 seats, and the CDPJ 128 to 191 seats.

The biggest winner of the night, the main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (CDPJ), was predicted to win 157, as voters punished Ishiba’s party over a funding scandal and inflation.

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The outcome may force parties into fractious power-sharing deals to rule, potentially ushering in political instability as the country faces economic headwinds and an increasingly tense security environment in East Asia.

“This election has been very tough for us,” a sombre-looking Ishiba told TV Tokyo with about 40 per cent of seats still to be declared.

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