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| Yuriko Koike has managed a successful career in Japan's male-dominated political landscape |
Tokyo governor Yuriko Koike is a conservative political veteran with a commanding media presence who has shown the toughness needed to climb the greasy pole of Japan's male-dominated politics.
The former
television anchorwoman, long seen as potentially Japan's first female prime
minister, has found herself in the national spotlight during the coronavirus
pandemic, appearing daily on TV to brief the megacity's 14 million residents.
Her calm
and measured speeches, peppered with catchy slogans, have presented a sharp
contrast to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who has been viewed as too slow to act
or too rigid and opaque in his addresses.
Koike swept
easily to a second term but critics say the 67-year-old's first four years as
governor were more about grabbing headlines than getting the job done.
Fluent in
English, and with conversational Arabic, Koike is a rare internationalist in
Japan's navel-gazing politics.
Born in
1952 in Ashiya city in western Japan, Koike attended the region's Kwansei
Gakuin University before graduating from Cairo University in Egypt in 1976.
After a stint
as a translator, she worked as a television broadcaster, interviewing Libyan
leader Moamer Kadhafi and Palestinian Liberation Organisation chair Yasser
Arafat.
She first
won an upper house seat in 1992 before switching to the more powerful lower
house the following year.
She joined
the ruling Liberal Democratic Party in 2002 and became environment minister in
2003.
During
Abe's first stint as PM, Koike served as a special advisor before becoming
Japan's first female defence minister.
While she
rubbed shoulders with top political figures, she enjoyed only lukewarm support
inside the LDP and failed in her bid to become party chief.
When she
ran in the Tokyo gubernatorial race in 2016, the LDP supported a different,
male candidate.
The people
of Tokyo, however, embraced her reformist zeal and gave her a landslide
victory, making her the first woman governor of the Japanese capital, home to
more than a tenth of Japan's entire population.
'Party of
Hope'
The next
year, she took a huge gamble in launching a new national "Party of
Hope", but support fizzled after a promising start, where it looked like
she could present a serious challenge to Abe.
Her
decision to stay as governor left the public unsure about who would become PM
if her party won the national election and she suffered a heavy defeat at the
polls.
Allies
turned rivals, Koike and Abe maintained cordial working relations as they
jointly prepared for the Tokyo Olympics, which would have been a major
political legacy for both of them.
But the
coronavirus pandemic forced a one-year delay of the Games after costly
preparations.
Koike
quickly shifted her focus to the fight against the infection, giving daily
media briefings and issuing warnings to Tokyoites that worse was to come.
She
repeated catchy anti-virus slogans in her televised addresses to encourage the
entire nation to stay home and avoid crowds.
In her
re-election bid, Koike comfortably ran an independent, online-only campaign,
with senior LDP members opening supporting her bid.

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