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  • A voter holds a leaflet of Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party with cover photos of the Prime Minister and the party president Fumio Kishida as she waits for the speech by Kishida, on the last day of campaigning for the October 31 lower house election, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Tokyo, Japan, 30 October 2021. (Photo: Reuters/Issei Kato)

    Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's support among young voters is decreasing, putting his tenure at risk despite efforts to appeal to this demographic with promises of unprecedented efforts to tackle Japan's declining birthrate. Having lowered the voting age to 18 years in 2015 to entice younger generations into politics, the ruling Liberal Democratic Party has seen its previously strong support among young voters dwindle, with support among those in their 30s and under dropping to just 23 per cent by April 2024. A political earthquake may be coming.

Editor's Pick

South Korean President Yoon hits a domestic dead end

Voters overwhelmingly rejected the South Korean conservative agenda in the 2024 parliamentary elections. President Yoon Suk-yeol, already a massively unpopular leader, will likely face calls to resign from within his own party amid a potential investigation of First Lady Kim Keon-hee. Despite this, foreign policy will be the one area where Yoon may be able to make some progress. He will likely continue to strengthen ties with Japan, the United States and Europe despite the legislative deadlock at home.

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Editor's Pick

South Korean ruling People Power Party's leader Han Dong-hoon leaves after a press conference following the 22nd parliamentary election day in Seoul, South Korea, 11 April 2024 (Photo: Reuters/Kim Hong-Ji).

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India's sweet spot
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