TOKYO — Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi plans to dissolve the lower house of Parliament soon to set up for a snap election to seek the public's mandate for her policies, a top party official said Wednesday.
Takaichi was elected in Parliament as Japan's first female prime minister in October. A snap election is seen as an attempt to capitalize her still strong approval ratings of around 70% to help her beleaguered governing party gain more seats.
Shunichi Suzuki, secretary general of the Liberal Democratic Party, told reporters Takaichi told him and other top officials she planned to dissolve the lower house ''soon'' after it convenes on Jan. 23.
Suzuki did not give dates for a dissolution or a snap election and said Takaichi will explain her plans at a news conference next Monday.
Her scandal-tainted LDP and its coalition have a slim majority in the lower house, the more powerful of Japan's two-chamber Parliament, after an election loss in 2024.
With an early election, Takaichi appeared to be aiming for securing a bigger share for the LDP and its new junior partner.
Opposition lawmakers criticized the plan as a selfish move that would delay parliamentary discussion on the budget, which needs to be approved as soon as possible.
Media reports have said Takaichi plans to dissolve the house on Jan. 23, the first day of this year's ordinary session, paving the way for a snap election as early as Feb. 8.