Japan's main opposition set for major seat loss in lower house: exit polls-Xinhua

Japan's main opposition set for major seat loss in lower house: exit polls

Source: Xinhua| 2026-02-08 20:53:15|Editor: huaxia

Staff members work at a counting station for the general election in Tokyo, Japan, Feb. 8, 2026. Japan's ruling coalition of Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and its partner Japan Innovation Party is expected to secure a majority of seats in the House of Representatives in Sunday's general election, public broadcaster NHK said, citing its exit poll. (Xinhua/Jia Haocheng)

TOKYO, Feb. 8 (Xinhua) -- Japan's main opposition party, the Centrist Reform Alliance, is projected to lose a significant number of seats in the House of Representatives in Sunday's general election, according to NHK exit polls.

Based on exit polls and other analyses, the alliance, formed in January by the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan and the Komeito party, is poised to win between 37 and 91 seats, down sharply from 172 before the election, public broadcaster NHK said.

The ruling coalition of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and its partner Japan Innovation Party, meanwhile, is expected to secure between 302 and 366 seats, the polls showed, meeting its target of securing a majority of 233 seats.

Sanae Takaichi has pledged to "immediately resign" as the country's prime minister if the coalition fails to secure a majority in the 465-member lower house.

For the LDP alone, the party is expected to win its single-party majority in the powerful lower house, according to NHK projections.

A total of 1,284 candidates are vying for the 465 seats in the House of Representatives, which consist of 289 in single-seat constituencies and 176 through proportional representation in 11 regional blocks across Japan.

According to the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, voter turnout stood at 26.01 percent at 6 p.m. local time, down 2.97 percentage points from the previous election.

It marked Japan's first lower house election held in February since 1990, a decision by Takaichi that has drawn criticism because heavy snowfall in many parts of the country has made campaigning difficult.

A staff member works at a counting station for the general election in Tokyo, Japan, Feb. 8, 2026. Japan's ruling coalition of Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and its partner Japan Innovation Party is expected to secure a majority of seats in the House of Representatives in Sunday's general election, public broadcaster NHK said, citing its exit poll. (Xinhua/Jia Haocheng)

A staff member works at a counting station for the general election in Tokyo, Japan, Feb. 8, 2026. Japan's ruling coalition of Liberal Democratic Party and its partner Japan Innovation Party is expected to secure a majority of seats in the House of Representatives in Sunday's general election, the NHK exit poll projected. (Xinhua/Jia Haocheng)

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