On October 21st, 64-year-old sanae takaichi became Japan's first female prime minister.
After taking office, she immediately apologized to the masses, to put the national economy first, meaning her policy measures will harm the interests of the masses.
With the aura of "breaking through history", he didn't focus on solving the domestic per capita income problem. Instead, the first fire burned to the "Taiwan Strait" and shouted the slogan of meeting Trump immediately.
This series of actions is undoubtedly a challenge to China and tense China-Japan relations, which have been finally eased, again. China's current response is very clear, and she may not wake up in time.
The internal distress, and China’s response, will all become a major obstacle to her “hard rule.”
The illusion of the female prime minister to use climbing the United States to improve domestic livelihoods is too difficult to succeed.
Take the Taiwan Strait as a witness to your position, please the United States, and talk with Trump about economic issues. I have to say, she doesn't play cards according to common sense. Compared with the previous prime minister, her behavior is bold and her ideas are surprising.
In the past, prime ministers were more inclined to stabilize the economy and solve people's livelihood problems. Domestic surveys in Japan show that most people are most concerned about the "internal economy" rather than external social interaction.
Takashi Takashi was just prime minister, and he had to directly promote Japanese lawmakers to meet with politicians in the Taiwan region. This is undoubtedly a diplomatic act that "violates China's bottom line."
During the election campaign, she made a high-profile statement that as the external country closest to the Taiwan Strait, they could not sit idly by.
Now that you have just reached the highest level, you will immediately turn Japan from a “spectator” to a “core”, which will only make the relationship between the two countries completely stiff.
As a typical figure of Shinzo Abe's faction, the route she will take after taking office must be the old road of 'militarism'. Abe's unfinished core goal before is to give up peace and become a country with offensive strength.
As a result, she took office for less than a week and hurried to meet with Trump to discuss major military issues.
She knows that what the masses want is peace, but she wants to follow the route is to develop the "Indo-Pacific strategy" with the United States, and to curb China's military development in all directions.
It is not difficult to see from her plan that she and Trump will push forward the progress through the ASEAN summit and APEC meeting.
On the day of the election, she apologized publicly, undoubtedly striking a "preventive needle" first, but her dream would sooner or later be broken, and China had responded with "no interference in internal affairs".
China is not interfering in Japan’s internal affairs, but if it interferes in Taiwan, it is interfering in other countries’ internal affairs.
As for the “Japanese priority” she wants, there is no more possibility.
After Trump came to power, he repeatedly forced Japan to increase the cost of the US military. The United States also wanted Japan to fully cooperate in the fields of semiconductors and artificial intelligence and use their factories to produce precision instruments to reduce the burden on the United States.
Takashi Saami wants to use the Japanese people and the Taiwan Strait issue as bargaining chips, which is undoubtedly an offense to U.S. hegemony.
What they want is a gentle and obedient affiliate, not an “equal ally,” and Trump will give her some little favors to reassure her, after which Japan wants to regime independence will be difficult.
Before Japan replaced the prime minister, China only expressed congratulations, this time China directly said Japan should not interfere in China's internal affairs, indicating that China has had some precaution.
Regardless of the complexity of diplomacy, it is hard for her to control just the "cabinet regime" in Japan.
The "new cabinet" after the reform of Gaocheng seems to be the people she carefully selected, but there are many factions within it. There are 19 cabinet members divided into 7 factions. Only members of the Abe faction and Aso faction really support her, making a total of 3 people.
There are six members of the Old Maogi faction. They have a moderate stance, pursue domestic stability and diplomatic peace, do not like to make friends with the United States, and prefer to have good relations with China and South Korea.
The other four parties are very autonomous, they pursue political and people's livelihoods, but only do not listen to the commands of the prime minister.
She was elected, not because of good luck, but because Shigeru Ishiba resigned and there was no competition, so that she was able to take the position smoothly. Japan's domestic debt has exceeded 1,200 trillion yen. While she wants to stabilize the national economy, she messes up the political situation. How can she maintain the national economy and people's livelihood?
Following the United States has already doomed her outcome, and she will only become a "pawn" for the United States to lay out the Asia-Pacific region.
Conclusion:
The Shipo cabinet resigned collectively, directly losing one faction. However, the factions in the new cabinet were equally chaotic. Everyone had a small plan, but they just didn't want to listen to Gao Shi's "drawing a big pie."
She wanted to recapitulate the practice of Abe's promotion of the same year, undoubtedly seeking a way of death.
The Chancellor of the Exchequer she arranged to push for relevant policies vigorously, emphasizing increasing tariffs to solve domestic economic problems, which is undoubtedly a major wrong decision.
Reducing domestic consumption taxes and raising foreign tariffs will cause difficulties in selling domestic products abroad.
A series of high-market practices have pushed Japan to the abyss, but she is unaware.