AI Library

AI Library

Books for Reading AI

Choose a book, then read it in order from the table of contents.

37 Concrete Codex Use Cases cover

Book-style reading

37 Concrete Codex Use Cases

Kim Kyung-jin

From morning briefings to agent swarms: 37 real-world workflow automations

This guide gathers 37 ways to connect Codex and AI agents to real work: personal routines, data processing, marketing, sales, documents, development, and browser control.

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2026 Beijing: The Dangerous Dance of Two Giants book cover

16 posts available

2026 Beijing: The Dangerous Dance of Two Giants

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Introduction, 13 Chapters, Epilogue

This book reads the Beijing summit through Hormuz, rare earths, Taiwan, Boeing, soybeans, AI chips, and Korea’s exposure to the U.S.-China bargain.

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Leaving It to AI and Stepping Away cover

27 posts

Leaving It to AI and Stepping Away

Kim Kyung-jin

A Complete Beginner’s Guide to YOLO Mode. Table of contents and 26 chapters

A beginner-friendly online book on YOLO mode in Claude Code and Codex. It explains how to let AI read files, write code, run commands, and finish work while keeping rollback, Docker sandboxing, and safety checks close at hand.

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Artificial Intelligence Fighter, Artificial Intelligence Air Force book cover

43 posts available

Artificial Intelligence Fighter, Artificial Intelligence Air Force

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, 40 Chapters, Epilogue

Artificial Intelligence Fighter, Artificial Intelligence Air Force is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It covers AI fighters, autonomous air power, unmanned combat aircraft, CCA, MUM-T, sixth-generation fighters and is organized as Table of Contents, Preface, 40 Chapters, Epilogue.

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Artificial Intelligence on Trial book cover

26 posts available

Artificial Intelligence on Trial

Attorney Kyungjin Kim

Table of Contents, Preface, 21 Chapters, 3 Appendices

Artificial Intelligence on Trial is an online AI Library book by Attorney Kyungjin Kim. It covers artificial intelligence and law, AI liability, algorithmic judgment, courts and technology and is organized as Table of Contents, Preface, 21 Chapters, 3 Appendices.

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PALANTIR book cover

16 posts available

PALANTIR: War, Surveillance, Artificial Intelligence

Attorney Kyungjin Kim

Table of Contents, Preface, 14 Chapters

PALANTIR: War, Surveillance, Artificial Intelligence is an online AI Library book by Attorney Kyungjin Kim. It covers Palantir, war, surveillance, artificial intelligence, data analytics, national security and is organized as Table of Contents, Preface, 14 Chapters.

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Brain Readers: Neuralink and the Final Human Revolution book cover

21 posts available

Brain Readers: Neuralink and the Final Human Revolution

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Prologue, 18 Chapters, Epilogue

Brain Readers: Neuralink and the Final Human Revolution is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It follows Neuralink, brain-computer interfaces, brain data, medicine, neurorights, and the future of human enhancement.

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Artificial Intelligence and the Reshaping of Society book cover

16 posts available

Artificial Intelligence and the Reshaping of Society

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, 13 Chapters, Epilogue

Artificial Intelligence and the Reshaping of Society is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It follows how artificial intelligence changes work, education, inequality, cities, democracy, and human relationships.

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The Jensen Huang Story book cover

16 posts available

The Jensen Huang Story

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, 13 Chapters, Epilogue

The Jensen Huang Story is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It covers Jensen Huang, NVIDIA, GPUs, AI chips, and the AI industry.

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Ten Questions AI Poses to Humanity book cover

12 posts available

Ten Questions AI Poses to Humanity

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, 10 Chapters

Ten Questions AI Poses to Humanity is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It asks how artificial intelligence changes truth, weapons, work, data, identity, and human control.

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Malaysia and the Malacca Strait book cover

23 posts available

Malaysia and the Malacca Strait: Whoever Controls It Controls the World

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, 20 Chapters, Epilogue

Malaysia and the Malacca Strait is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It covers Malaysia, the Malacca Strait, maritime logistics, geopolitics, global trade, and Southeast Asia’s strategic future.

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Georgia history and culture travel book cover

24 posts available

A Journey Through Georgia’s History and Culture

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, 17 Chapters, 4 Appendices, Epilogue

A Journey Through Georgia’s History and Culture is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It covers Georgia’s history, culture, religion, politics, travel, and the Caucasus crossroads between Europe and Asia.

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Reading Armenia book cover

13 posts available

Reading Armenia: A Thousand Prayers, One Mountain

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, 10 Chapters, Epilogue

Reading Armenia: A Thousand Prayers, One Mountain is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It covers Armenian history, faith, Mount Ararat, cultural memory, travel, and the endurance of a small nation.

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Mastering Claude Code book cover

41 posts available

Mastering Claude Code

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, Chapters, Appendices

Mastering Claude Code is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It covers Claude Code setup, commands, workflows, automation, agents, and practical methods for using Claude Code in real work.

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Claude Cowork and Agent manual book cover

11 posts available

Claude Cowork and Agent Utilization Manual

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, 8 Chapters, Closing Note

Claude Cowork and Agent Utilization Manual is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It covers Claude Code, AI agents, coding automation, work automation, and practical agent-based collaboration.

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2026 U.S.-Iran War and the Global Energy Crisis book cover

39 posts available

The 2026 U.S.-Iran War and the Global Energy Crisis

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, Chapters and Appendices

The 2026 U.S.-Iran War and the Global Energy Crisis is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It covers war, oil, the Strait of Hormuz, maritime security, energy markets, and the global consequences of conflict.

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The Traces Han Dong-hoon Left on South Korea book cover

13 posts available

The Traces Han Dong-hoon Left on South Korea

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Prologue, Chapters, Epilogue

The Traces Han Dong-hoon Left on South Korea is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It examines his record in justice policy, immigration reform, public institutions, and the structural questions facing South Korea.

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The Han Dong-hoon Story book cover

39 posts available

The Han Dong-hoon Story

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Prologue, Chapters, Epilogue

The Han Dong-hoon Story is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. It traces Han Dong-hoon’s life, public career, political choices, and the changing landscape of South Korean conservative politics.

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Beyond the Glass Ceiling cover

39 entries

Beyond the Glass Ceiling

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of contents, prologue, 31 chapters, epilogue, 5 appendices

A political biography tracing Sanae Takaichi’s rise from Nara to Japan’s premiership, through party struggles, security policy, diplomacy, and the meaning of Japan’s first female prime minister.

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AI Hegemony War book cover

8 posts available

AI Hegemony War

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, 7 Chapters

An online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin on AI superintelligence, the U.S.-China technology race, Europe and Korea’s AI laws, and international AI governance.

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Sam Altman Biography: Pioneer of the AI Revolution cover

22 posts

Sam Altman Biography: Pioneer of the AI Revolution

Kim Kyung-jin, Kim Kyung-ran

Table of contents, preface, 7 parts, 20 chapters

An online biography following Sam Altman’s childhood, startups, Y Combinator, OpenAI, ChatGPT, the 2023 board crisis, and his sense of responsibility in the AI era.

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From Chaiwala to Prime Minister cover

13 entries

From Chaiwala to Prime Minister

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of contents, preface, 10 chapters, epilogue

A political biography tracing Narendra Modi from a chai-selling boy in Vadnagar to RSS organizer, Gujarat chief minister, and three-term prime minister, while reading modern India, Korea-India relations, and the risks of a rising power.

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AI Classroom: Your Grades Will Change book cover

26 posts available

AI Classroom: Your Grades Will Change

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, 24 Sections

An online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin on how AI can support elementary, middle, and high school learning, teaching, assessment, and educational equity.

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Military Artificial Intelligence cover

17 entries

Military Artificial Intelligence

Kim Kyung-jin and Kim Won-tae

Table of contents, preface, 14 chapters, epilogue

A full-length study of military artificial intelligence, from autonomous weapons, drones, command systems, logistics, and cyber defense to the strategies of the United States, China, Israel, Korea, and global defense AI companies.

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Global Case Studies in Introducing AI into Public Administration book cover

25 posts available

Global Case Studies in Introducing AI into Public Administration

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, 23 Chapters, Epilogue

An online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin on public-sector AI adoption, national strategies, administrative services, governance, and future policy tasks.

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Seven Misunderstandings About the Arctic Route book cover

10 posts available

Seven Misunderstandings About the Arctic Route

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, 7 Chapters, Epilogue

An online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin on seven common misunderstandings about the Arctic Route, including speed, liner service, insurance, safety rules, year-round access, carbon impact, and infrastructure.

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Artificial Intelligence Election cover

14 posts

Artificial Intelligence Election

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of contents, author preface, 11 chapters, closing essay

An online book on campaign messaging, publicity materials, digital campaigning, data analysis, campaign operations, disinformation defense, legal risk, and ready-to-use prompts.

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Demis Hassabis book cover

34 posts available

Demis Hassabis, Father of Google’s Artificial Intelligence

Kim Kyung-ran, Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Author’s Preface, 31 Chapters, Epilogue

Demis Hassabis, Father of Google’s Artificial Intelligence is an online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-ran, Kim Kyung-jin. It covers Demis Hassabis, Google DeepMind, artificial intelligence, AlphaGo, AI research and is organized as Table of Contents, Author’s Preface, 31 Chapters, Epilogue.

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The Dhammapada 423 Verses book cover

28 posts available

The Dhammapada: 423 Verses

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Editor’s Note, 26 Chapters, 423 Verses

An online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin. This edition arranges all 423 verses of the Dhammapada into 26 chapters for slow, poetic reading.

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Nano Banana Pro Practical Prompt Book cover

24 posts

Nano Banana Pro Practical Prompt Book

Kim Kyung-jin

6 parts, 22 chapters, classroom prompt appendix

An online book for using Nano Banana Pro in classes and real work, covering image generation, editing, text rendering, character consistency, business use cases, and monetization.

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Liberal Arts AI for College Students book cover

16 posts available

Liberal Arts AI for College Students

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, 13 Chapters, Closing Essay

An online AI Library textbook for college students. It introduces AI history, daily use, document work, research, images, presentations, video, productivity, learning, careers, copyright, and governance.

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Legal Practice and Artificial Intelligence book cover

16 posts available

Legal Practice and Artificial Intelligence

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, 14 Parts

An online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin on legal research, drafting, evidence analysis, contract review, NotebookLM, and practical generative AI workflows for legal practice.

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Hello, I Am Kim Kyung-jin book cover

10 posts available

Hello, I Am Kim Kyung-jin

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Preface, Recommendations, 6 Chapters, Closing

An online AI Library book on Kim Kyung-jin’s life, science and technology policy, parliamentary diplomacy, legislative battles, Dongdaemun vision, and proposals for Korea’s demographic future.

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Politics and People book cover

25 posts available

Politics and People

Kim Kyung-jin

Table of Contents, Prologue, 22 Chapters, Epilogue

An online AI Library book by Kim Kyung-jin on how politics begins with reading people, winning trust, keeping relationships, and enduring seasons of crisis.

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[AI Library] Chapter 18: The Third Challenge and the Prime Ministership

Beyond the Glass Ceiling
Author
Kim Kyung-jin
Date
2026-05-07 03:34
Views
400

Beyond the Glass Ceiling

Part 4: Challenge — Three Presidential Elections

Chapter 18: The Third Challenge and the Prime Ministership

Kim Kyung-jin

October 4, 2025. The auditorium of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) Headquarters in Tokyo.

The results of the runoff were announced.

Sanae Takaichi, 185 votes. Shinjiro Koizumi, 156 votes.

The margin was 29 votes.

The atmosphere inside the auditorium was completely different from what it had been in the same place a year ago. Some supporters burst into tears. The applause would not stop. Takaichi, standing on the platform, raised her hand. This time, there was no reason to hide the tears in her eyes.

Seventy years since the founding of the LDP. It was the moment the first female president was born.

Three challenges. It was finally achieved on the third attempt.

One year had passed before reaching this point.

In the 2024 presidential election, Shigeru Ishiba became the president and took office as Prime Minister. However, the Ishiba Cabinet did not have a smooth start. In the October 2024 general election held just a month after its launch, the ruling coalition of the LDP and Komeito lost its majority. It became a minority government. The opposition-led Diet pressured the budget bill, and coordination was necessary for every major piece of legislation. Prime Minister Ishiba’s approval rating was low from the start.

Throughout 2025, voices discussing "After Ishiba" echoed within the LDP. As the summer House of Councillors election approached, those voices grew louder. And in September 2025, Prime Minister Ishiba resolved to step down.

Once again, the seat of the president was vacant.

A third opportunity had come for Sanae Takaichi.

The structure of the 2025 LDP presidential election was different from that of 2024.

This time, five candidates ran: Sanae Takaichi, Shinjiro Koizumi (小泉進次郎), Yoshimasa Hayashi (林芳正), Toshimitsu Motegi (茂木敏充), and Itsunori Onodera (小野寺五典).

Compared to 2024, when nine candidates were entangled, it was a much more organized field. Consequently, the battle was clearer.

A two-way race between Takaichi and Koizumi. It was effectively a duel between the two.

Shinjiro Koizumi had failed to advance to the runoff in the 2024 presidential election, finishing third in the first round. However, his popularity among the general public remained overwhelming. His youth at 44, his symbolism as the son of former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, and his sensible remarks on modern issues such as the environment attracted the hearts of independent voters.

Takaichi fought from a different angle. She targeted the Diet members rather than public opinion. The cause of her defeat in 2024 had been the Diet member votes. She had to address that weakness.

There was something she had done for a year. While maintaining a critical distance from the Ishiba Cabinet from the outside, she put great effort into building trust with Diet members. After the factions were dissolved, she personally built a new network of lawmakers. While maintaining her image as a staunch conservative, she endeavored to demonstrate her capacity as a realistic politician capable of forming a cabinet and managing the Diet. Paradoxically, the failure of the Ishiba Cabinet increased Takaichi's presence. A sentiment spread within the party: "Ishiba tried, but it didn't work. This time, it must be Takaichi."

On October 4, 2025, the results of the first round of voting were announced.

Koizumi, who had been leading in public opinion polls, led the first round of voting, driven by party member votes. Takaichi took the lead in the Diet member votes. No candidate obtained a majority. Takaichi and Koizumi advanced to the runoff.

In the runoff, the Diet members moved.

The result has already been stated: Takaichi 185 votes, Koizumi 156 votes. A difference of 29 votes.

Many of the Diet members who had leaned toward Ishiba in 2024 out of a consensus that "Takaichi must be stopped" chose Takaichi this time. The year under the Ishiba Cabinet had changed their judgment. The limitations of managing a minority government, low approval ratings, and difficulties in pushing policies led to a realistic assessment among lawmakers: "If even Ishiba tried and it's not working, Takaichi is the better option."

Furthermore, Shinjiro Koizumi's weakness was revealed. While highly popular with the public, his perceived lack of policy depth and parliamentary experience made it difficult to fully secure the trust of the lawmakers. LDP members placed more weight on execution capability than on trendy popularity when casting their votes.

The first female president in the 70 years since the founding of the LDP. Sanae Takaichi became the 29th President of the Liberal Democratic Party.

Time moved quickly immediately after the presidential election.

On October 15, 2025, an extraordinary session of the Diet was convened. In the election to designate the Prime Minister, the House of Representatives designated Sanae Takaichi as the Prime Minister. Although a different result emerged in the House of Councillors, the result was finalized in accordance with the constitutional provision that the decision of the House of Representatives takes precedence in the case of disagreement between the two houses.

October 21, 2025.

Sanae Takaichi, the 104th Prime Minister.

She was the first female Prime Minister in constitutional history.

It was the first time a woman had ascended to the position of Japan's Prime Minister in the 140 years since the cabinet system began in 1885. It was late compared to major Western countries. Margaret Thatcher led Britain in 1979, and Angela Merkel led Germany in 2005. Female heads of government were also rare among major East Asian countries. That historic transition finally took place in Tokyo.

By that fact alone, a page of history was turned.

That evening, a press conference was held at the Prime Minister's Official Residence.

Prime Minister Takaichi stood on the platform. A navy blue suit. Bobbed hair swept back. As usual, her voice was calm. Questions from reporters poured in: Constitutional amendment, economic policy, and her symbolism as a female Prime Minister.

A reporter asked how she felt about standing in this position after three challenges.

Takaichi paused for a moment. Then she replied, "Today exists because there were two defeats. I think it is important not to give up." It was a short sentence, but more than 20 years of history were compressed within it.

Another reporter asked what she wanted to show Japanese society as a female Prime Minister.

"I think the biggest message is that a capable person challenges themselves regardless of gender, and that challenge bears fruit. I will be the proof of that myself."

The composition of the first cabinet was announced.

The selection of ministers for the Takaichi Cabinet attracted attention in many ways.

She appointed Toshimitsu Motegi, Shinjiro Koizumi, and Yoshimasa Hayashi—who had competed with her in the presidential election—to important posts. Embracing rivals was a long-standing tradition of the LDP. There were 10 first-time ministers. In the field of economic security, Takaichi herself had a strong interest and appointed experts.

There were only two female ministers. Criticism arose that Japan's first female Prime Minister did not appoint enough women. Takaichi stated her conviction that "it should not be a position for the sake of a position, but a capable person should sit in the appropriate position." Her stance of prioritizing meritocracy over gender quotas also drew criticism from the feminist camp. This was a route that Takaichi chose intentionally. She wanted to show that she became Prime Minister not because she was a woman, but because of her ability.

She chose the Japan Innovation Party (日本維新の会) as the coalition partner. She broke the long-standing coalition with Komeito and built a new framework. The coalition with the Innovation Party also aligned with the strategic goal of securing two-thirds of the House of Representatives to propose a constitutional amendment. The fact that the Innovation Party was relatively favorable toward constitutional reform was decisive.

On October 24, Prime Minister Takaichi delivered her policy speech in the Diet.

In the speech, she strongly emphasized three pillars.

"Strong Economy." "Strong Defense." "Constitutional Amendment."

Regarding constitutional amendment in particular, she expressed a specific will to "propose it during the term." This included the explicit mention of the Self-Defense Forces and the establishment of an emergency clause. It was a declaration that she would achieve the LDP's long-cherished wish with her own hands.

In the economic field, she put forward "Responsible Active Finance" as a keyword. It was a logic of strategically investing in fields that lead to growth, rather than indiscriminate fiscal expansion. She reaffirmed her cautious stance on sudden interest rate hikes by the Bank of Japan.

In the field of diplomacy, while emphasizing the robustness of the Japan-US alliance, she used the expression "strategic autonomy." It meant pursuing an equal partnership rather than dependence.

In November 2025, the Takaichi Cabinet faced its first diplomatic crisis.

Prime Minister Takaichi spoke at the House of Representatives Budget Committee: "If a Taiwan contingency (台湾有事) occurs and China exercises force by mobilizing warships, I believe this would be a crisis for Japan's survival, no matter how you look at it."

China reacted immediately. They protested strongly, calling it "interference in internal affairs." A spokesperson for the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs criticized Japan with high-intensity rhetoric. The Chinese government even went so far as to recommend its citizens refrain from traveling to Japan.

However, this crisis actually increased the approval rating of the Takaichi Cabinet. A positive response came from the Japanese public, who said, "The Prime Minister is speaking confidently." The United States expressed support for Prime Minister Takaichi's remarks. Bloomberg News analyzed that "China's overreaction actually helped Takaichi."

The diplomatic crisis was transformed into an opportunity for internal unity. The essence of Takaichi as a politician was revealed more clearly in this crisis: not backing down under pressure and not taking back what was said. That consistency was read as a strength by her supporters.

On January 19, 2026, Prime Minister Takaichi announced the dissolution of the House.

It was only three months after she took office. She named it the "Dissolution for Investment in the Future." She said directly, "Please let the people decide whether Sanae Takaichi (高市早苗) is right as Prime Minister or not." The election was announced on January 27, with voting and counting on February 8.

The results came out.

LDP, 316 seats. It was a historic landslide victory. Including the Japan Innovation Party, they held 352 seats. The ruling parties occupied more than 75% of the 465 seats in the House of Representatives.

The centrist opposition collapsed. The opposition bloc, centered on the Constitutional Democratic Party, failed both to unify and to present an alternative. Opposition leaders announced their resignations one after another.

Why such an overwhelming victory?

Three factors overlapped.

First, the symbolism of being the "first female Prime Minister" attracted independent and female voters. No previous LDP Prime Minister had such a fresh image. This novelty drove people to the polling stations.

Second was the failure of the opposition parties. They suffered from internal conflict and were unable to present a viable alternative to the LDP. Voters felt their choices were limited.

Third, the economic situation helped. The early effects of "Sanaenomics" began to appear just before the election. Wages continued to rise, and the stock market remained stable. The warmth of active finance began to reach regional economies.

With more than two-thirds of the seats, the administration could now re-pass bills in the House of Representatives even if the House of Councillors rejected them. The number of seats required to propose a constitutional amendment was also secured.

After the landslide victory in the general election, Prime Minister Takaichi launched her second cabinet. The foundation of the administration was solidified.

One might ask what was gained after three challenges.

Prime Minister Takaichi herself said, "I mastered economic security from the first defeat, and I learned how to gain the trust of Diet members from the second defeat. Winning on the third attempt is the result of that learning."

But there is a deeper meaning.

Takaichi's first challenge was in 2021. At that time, when she stood before the party members and said, "I will become Japan's first female Prime Minister," many people laughed. It seemed like an impossible dream. In the LDP, a conservative party, a woman becoming Prime Minister felt like a story from a distant world.

That dream became a reality four years later.

In that process, there are things she lost: the frustration of two defeats, intra-party conflicts with rivals, and the experience of her own beliefs becoming political barriers.

But she did not give up. She waited for the third opportunity, and she did not miss it.

Her name was engraved in Japanese political history: Sanae Takaichi, the 104th Prime Minister. It was an administration that began with the modifier "the first."

Now, the time has come to achieve something that is not just "the first."

References - LDP Official Site — Election of New President Sanae Takaichi: https://www.jimin.jp/news/information/211511.html - Nikkei — Ms. Takaichi becomes new LDP President, defeating Mr. Koizumi in runoff: https://www.nikkei.com/article/DGXZQOUA231WX0T20C25A9000000/ - Jiji.com — Ms. Takaichi becomes new LDP President: https://www.jiji.com/jc/article?k=2025100400343&g=pol - Prime Minister’s Official Residence — Inaugural Press Conference of Prime Minister Takaichi: https://www.kantei.go.jp/jp/104/statement/2025/1021kaiken.html - Liberal Democratic Party — Takaichi elected as the 104th Prime Minister: https://www.jimin.jp/news/information/211635.html - Jiji.com — LDP landslide victory with over 316 seats: https://www.jiji.com/jc/article?k=2026020900010&g=pol - nippon.com — LDP's historic landslide victory in the 2026 House of Representatives election: https://www.nippon.com/ja/japan-data/h02703/

Kim Kyung-jin

Kim Kyung-jin AI Library

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