TOKYO — Japan's prime minister is a heavy metal music fan. She loves motorcycles and playing the drums, including with visiting dignitaries. She thrilled a nation that often fetishizes company loyalty by declaring that her secret for success as leader would be '' work, work, work, work, work. ''
This charismatic combination, along with an image that is both tough and playful, has made Sanae Takaichi very popular, something exceedingly unusual for recent prime ministers her political party, which has led Japan for most of the last seven decades, has struggled mightily.
In stark contrast to the long line of often elderly men who've run Japan over the decades, Takaichi's popularity is rooted in her support by younger people. They affectionately use her nickname, ''Sana,'' and closely follow her fashion, her choice of stationery and her favorite food — steamed pork buns.
Her Liberal Democratic Party, despite deep-rooted problems, made big gains in Sunday's vote in the lower house of Parliament, thanks in large part to Takaichi.
She wants to use this new power to take the country in the direction of her hawkish, deeply conservative mentor, the late Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, and beyond.
The Associated Press takes a look at the first woman to lead Japan as prime minister.
She worked her way up from the middle class
Born in Nara, Japan's ancient capital, Takaichi was raised by conservative parents who taught her prewar moral values. Her mother was a police officer and her father worked at a machinery maker.