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                        | Liberal Democratic Party  President Sanae Takaichi (centre) looks on ahead of an extraordinary  session of the Lower House on Tuesday in Tokyo, where she was elected Japan’s  first female prime minister. --Photo AFP |  Sanae Takaichi makes  history as Japan’s first female prime minister
 
 JAPAN (The Japan  Times/ANN) -- Liberal Democratic Party President Sanae Takaichi was elected  prime minister by parliament Tuesday, shattering Japan’s glass ceiling to  become the country’s first female leader.
 Takaichi avoided a runoff  by rolling to victory in a first round of voting in the Lower House, garnering  237 votes against Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan leader Yoshihiko  Noda’s 149.
 Lawmakers applauded  Takaichi as she voted and welcomed her with another thunderous round of  applause after her election.
 Monday’s coalition  agreement between the LDP and the Japan Innovation Party (JIP) had made a  Takaichi victory all but certain by delivering the support needed to fend off  any challenge from a united opposition.
 Takaichi was on Tuesday  morning already moving ahead with forming a Cabinet ahead of her formal  election as prime minister. No lawmakers from the JIP — which is also known as  Nippon Ishin no Kai — are expected to join the Cabinet.
  Early media reports suggest that some of her  fellow contenders in the party presidential race — including Yoshimasa Hayashi,  Shinjiro Koizumi and former Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi — could secure  key Cabinet posts in the new administration. Hayashi and Koizumi, who served as  the government’s top spokesman and farm minister, respectively, resigned en  masse from the Cabinet of Shigeru Ishiba on Tuesday morning.During her campaign for  the LDP presidency, Takaichi had also hinted she would appoint a high number of  female lawmakers if she took government.
 Meanwhile, JIP  parliamentary affairs chief Takashi Endo — one of the key architects of the  coalition — is expected to be named adviser to the prime minister.
 A former economic  security and internal affairs minister, Takaichi has served in the Lower House  for roughly 30 years.
 She secured the LDP  leadership earlier this month on her third attempt.
 
 Police warn against  rallies disrupting Asean Summit routes and proceedings
 KUALA LUMPUR (The  Star/ANN) --Stern action will be taken against demonstrations or rallies that  disrupt routes or proceedings during the 47th Asean Summit, says Comm Datuk  Fadil Marsus.
 The Kuala Lumpur police  chief said police have received intelligence on planned demonstrations during  the event. “We have engaged the organisers of the rallies,” he said on October  21.
 “We will take stern  action against any gatherings that disrupt traffic, interrupt the Asean Summit  or jeopardise public order,” added Comm Fadil. Several roads in the city centre  will be closed and diverted in stages from October 26 to 28.
 JSPT director Comm Datuk  Seri Mohd Yusri Hassan Basri announced this earlier.
   (Latest Update October 21, 2025)
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