TOKYO — Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's big election win paves the way for her ruling party to dominate the crucial lower house of parliament. It also gives her the political power to make a strong rightward shift in Japan's security, immigration and social policies.
Here's what to know about that divisive conservative agenda, which she calls necessary to make Japan ''strong and prosperous.''
Larger military capability, spending and arms sales
Takaichi has pledged to revise security and defense policies by December to bolster Japan's military capabilities, lifting a ban on weapons exports and moving further away from postwar pacifist principles.
Takaichi wants to build up intelligence-gathering to work more closely with ally Washington and defense partners such as Australia and Britain. She plans to establish a national intelligence agency to meet those goals. She is also pushing to enact a highly controversial anti-espionage law that experts say could undermine civil rights.
Takaichi has followed through on a pledge to U.S. President Donald Trump to push Japan's annual defense budget to double 2022 levels to 2% of its gross domestic product by March.
Trump, China and WWII history
Takaichi is set to visit Washington to meet with Trump at the White House on March 19. The U.S. president announced on social media the trip as he endorsed the prime minister ahead of Sunday's election.