Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi issued a public apology this week after her Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) chapter admitted accepting corporate donations exceeding legal limits – the latest blow to the ruling party embroiled in financial controversies since 2023.
💰 The Scandal Unfolds
At a heated parliamentary session on December 9, Takaichi confirmed her Nara Prefecture chapter returned 2.5 million yen ($16,100) after accepting 10 million yen from a Tokyo firm last August. Political funding laws cap such donations at 7.5 million yen for this donor category.
🔍 Professor Turns Whistleblower
The revelation came after Kobe Gakuin University's Hiroshi Kamiwaki filed a formal complaint with prosecutors on December 4. This follows the 2023 LDP slush fund scandal where factions allegedly created secret funds through unrecorded ticket sales for political events.
🚨 A Pattern of Controversy
Seven officials appointed by Takaichi since her October 2025 inauguration have been linked to the ongoing scandal. Political analysts suggest the repeated controversies reveal systemic issues: "When multiple appointees are implicated, it signals either poor judgment or institutional rot," says Tokyo University political scientist Yumi Nakano.
With public trust eroding, critics argue the apology lacks concrete reform plans. As Japan navigates economic challenges, this financial cloud over its leadership raises crucial questions about accountability in 2025's political landscape.
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Japanese PM apologizes for accepting excess corporate donations
cgtn.com







