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Japan PM Shigeru Ishiba steps down weeks after election defeat, trade deal Investing.com-- Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba on Sunday announced his resignation as president of the Liberal Democratic Party, just weeks after its ruling coalition suffered a crushing defeat in a July election. Ishiba signaled he had held off from resigning until his administration secured a trade deal with Washington, while also commending top trade negotiator Ryosei Akazawa. Ishiba said at a press conference that he will not run in the LDP’s upcoming special election, according to comments translated by public broadcaster NHK. He will continue to maintain office until a successor is elected, Ishiba told reporters. The former prime minister had faced growing calls to resign since his ruling coalition lost its majority in the upper house. Ishiba said on Sunday he took responsibility for the loss. Ishiba’s resignation also comes just days after U.S. President Donald Trump signed an order implementing a late-July trade deal with Tokyo. The deal will see Japanese exports to the U.S. face a 15% tariff, lower than the 25% initially outlined by Trump. His ouster comes amid turbulent times for the Japanese economy, which now faces tariff-related headwinds for its key export industries. Sticky inflation, against a backdrop of steady private spending, is also expected to push the Bank of Japan into hiking interest rates. The country now faces a leadership struggle in its ruling government, with a report from Reuters outlining LDP veteran Sanae Takaichi, Agriculture Minister Shinkiro Koizumi, and Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi as possible candidates for prime minister. 3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or remove ads. Former Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda leads the biggest opposition group to the LDP, the centre-left Constitutional Democrats. Which stock should you buy in your very next trade? AI computing powers are changing the stock market. Investing.com's ProPicks AI includes dozens of winning stock portfolios chosen by our advanced AI. Year to date, 3 out of 4 global portfolios are beating their benchmark indexes, with 98% in the green. Our flagship Tech Titans strategy doubled the S&P 500 within 18 months, including notable winners like Super Micro Computer (+185%) and AppLovin (+157%). Which stock will be the next to soar?

Click Subscribe. #Japan #ShigeruIshiba #ElectionDefeat #TradeDeal #Politics

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Japan’s Ishiba denies reports he will resign
Japan’s Ishiba denies reports he will resign YouTube video by B.C. Begley

Japan’s Ishiba denies reports he will resign
#JapanPolitics #Ishiba #ElectionDefeat
www.youtube.com/watch?v=IklO...

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Japan PM Ishiba to resign over upper house election defeat- Yomiuri Investing.com-- Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has decided to step down over his party’s recent defeat in the July 20 upper house elections, the Yomiuri newspaper reported on Wednesday. Ishiba plans to announce his resignation before the end of July, in order to take responsibility for the Liberal Democratic Party’s loss of its majority in Japan’s upper house, the report said. The election loss dealt a major blow to the LDP-led ruling coalition, which will now need to collaborate with regional parties and potentially some of its rivals in order to pass more legislation. The Yomiuri report comes just hours after U.S. President Donald Trump announced a trade deal with Japan, which will see the Asian economic giant subject to a 15% tariff. Ishiba welcomed the deal, having earlier signaled that he would remain in office at least until a trade agreement with the U.S. was reached. Ishiba said on Wednesday he would make his final decision public after fully reviewing the trade agreement, once Ryosei Akazawa, Japan’s top negotiator, returns from Washington. An earlier report from Japanese newspaper Mainichi said that Ishiba will formally announce his resignation by end-August. With valuations skyrocketing in 2024, many investors are uneasy putting more money into stocks. Unsure where to invest next? Get access to our proven portfolios and discover high-potential opportunities. In 2024 alone, ProPicks AI identified 2 stocks that surged over 150%, 4 additional stocks that leaped over 30%, and 3 more that climbed over 25%. That's an impressive track record. With portfolios tailored for Dow stocks, S&P stocks, Tech stocks, and Mid Cap stocks, you can explore various wealth-building strategies.

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PDM faces financial collapse, plans to axe 16 staff after election defeat Popular Democratic Movement (PDM) is planning on retrenching 16 employees as it struggles to stay afloat financially following its huge defeat in the 2024 presidential and National Assembly elections. According to a leaked document dated 19 May and seen by The Namibian, PDM management, led by party secretary general Manuel Ngaringombe, informed staff representatives that the party’s current salary commitments amount to 60% of its income. PDM president McHenry Venaani yesterday said the retrenchment issue is internal and ongoing. “You can ask me about policy, not administrative matters. The whole process of retrenchment has not started. We are still negotiating,” Venaani said. He referred questions on the matter to Ngaringombe instead. Ngaringombe did not respond to questions or calls made to him at the time of going to print. According to the document, Ngaringombe says without immediate action, the party risks complete financial collapse. PDM faced defeat in the 2024 presidential and National Assembly elections after it lost 11 parliamentary seats, from 16 to five. A list of 16 staff members earmarked for retrenchment was shared during the meeting, alongside 13 employees who will be retained. Management also proposed that all 16 regional coordinators and three wing leaders take three months of unpaid leave, after which they would return on reduced pay and commission-based compensation. The document shows that regional coordinators will receive salaries of N$2 000 and they will be paid for work done on a commission basis. “Ngaringombe emphasised that the reason for retrenchment is economically motivated which will also be the reason given to the labour commissioner. He said PDM will do what it can when it is not monetary, such as write testimonials. However, when it comes to monetary demands, the party can only do what it can do,” the minutes read. Staff representatives, led by Collen Wimmerth, question the selection process of those employees facing retrenchment. Wimmerth calls for clarity on salary deductions, and proposes alternative measures, including a 5% to 10% salary cut across the board and fair severance packages. “Ngaringombe also acknowledged the administrative weaknesses in formalising agreements and committed to addressing them going forward by ensuring employees receive pay-slips every month end so that employees are always informed of any deductions. He also ensured the delegates that there will be no unfair treatment of staff in this process,” the document reads. It futher notes that some regional coordinators of the party reported being informed that they would receive the standard salary of N$7 000 but were instead paid reduced amounts without their explicit consent – in some cases as low as N$3 400. A party central committee meeting allegedly agreed that regional coordinators in rural areas must be paid N$5 000 while those in urban areas must be paid N$7 000. Additionally, the document shows that PDM treasurer Nico Smit pointed out that the income of the party determines what the party can and cannot do. Ngaringombe allegedly sent a memo to all employees in 2024, stating that their contracts will be terminated in March 2025 should the party perform poorly during the elections. “Smit said if regional councillors were to demand that they are paid out for the remaining 4 1⁄2 years of their contract, and the party is unable to, and a court of law orders the party to do so, the party will be declared insolvent. This would lead to the party’s deregistration at the Electoral Commission of Namibia (ECN), and councillors, as well as members of parliament would lose their jobs instantly,” the document reads. PDM is currently in court as six senior members are suing the party, the ECN and the National Assembly for compensation of N$1.9 million over their exclusion from parliament in 2020. Political analyst Marius Kudumo says it is obvious that losing seats in parliament has implications on the revenue of political parties. “The future political and financial stability of the party would depend on whether the party has income generating strategies in place to fill the gap,” Kudumo says. The post PDM faces financial collapse, plans to axe 16 staff after election defeat appeared first on The Namibian.

#PDM #Namibia #ElectionDefeat #FinancialStruggles #StaffRetrenchment

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Swara, husband Fahad Ahmad accept defeat: We fought tooth and nail in a David-Goliath battle - Yes Punjab News Swara Bhasker and Fahad Ahmad accept defeat in Maharashtra elections, addressing EVM issues and expressing gratitude for support.

Swara, husband Fahad Ahmad accept defeat: We fought tooth and nail in a David-Goliath battle
yespunjab.com?p=64900

#SwaraBhasker #FahadAhmad #MaharashtraElections #DavidVsGoliath #ElectionDefeat #AnushaktiNagar #MaharashtraElection2024

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