POLITICS
Japan Confirms Ainu Indigenous Rights After Right-Wing Politician’s Statement
Ainu rights are in the news again after the head of the Conservative Party of Japan questioned their indigenous status.
Japan's political landscape is noisier, more varied, and more consequential than most English-language coverage suggests. (Did you know, for examplke, that Japan is home to the world's largest elected Communist party?) This category covers the Diet and local governments, constitutional debates, party politics, fringe movements, and the moments when a pop star's lyrics or a brand collab become flashpoints for something much larger.
Our reporting draws directly from Japanese-language sources: party manifestos, Diet testimony, domestic polls, and the journalists and activists inside Japan covering these stories. Rather than treating Japanese politics as background noise in a foreign-policy dispatch, we try to understand it on its own terms: who holds power, who is fighting for a seat at the table, and who gets talked about rather than listened to.
There's a lot going on here. The rise of the far right (Sanseito's MAGA-borrowed tactics and calls to restore an imperial-era constitution) marks a real shift in Japan's political terrain. We track how populist politicians spread misinformation about foreigners and immigrants, and how that misinformation sticks.
We also follow civil liberties fights: anti-spy legislation that could criminalize fandom, proposals to make flag defacement a crime. We cover the Ainu's ongoing struggle to have their indigenous status recognized rather than relitigated by politicians who find it inconvenient. And we pay very close attention to gender politics: the women politicians dismissed as 'honorary men,' the debates over spousal surnames that still draw death threats, and the welfare proposals that right-wingers attack on reflex.
POLITICS
Ainu rights are in the news again after the head of the Conservative Party of Japan questioned their indigenous status.
POLITICS
Last night's protest brought out over 3x more participants than the last as Japanese citizens stated their opposition.
POLITICS
The incident, along with another anime-related collab controversy, is a sign of increasing tensions between Japan and China.
POLITICS
One lawmaker warns that proposed spy legislation could tread on a booming business in Japan: support for one's favorite idol or star.
POLITICS
If the coalition gets its way, defacing the Hi no Maru flag - an act currently considered protected speech - could become…
POLITICS
The woman who may be Japan's first prime minister is under fire for her "fossil-like thinking" on women's rights.
POLITICS
The lawmaker later backtracked on the statement, saying that he only meant they didn't have "the same rights" as Japanese citizens.
POLITICS
Are foreigners mistreating the deer in Nara? One prominent Japanese politician says so - but the facts don't back her up.