Japan political party to install AI leader
World
By
AFP
| Sep 16, 2025
An upstart Japanese political party said Tuesday it will install an artificial intelligence as leader after its maverick founder quit following a disastrous showing in recent elections.
The Path to Rebirth party, which was launched in January by Shinji Ishimaru, a former mayor of a small city in western Japan, does not have a policy platform and its members are free to set their own agendas.
Ishimaru unexpectedly came second in the 2024 Tokyo gubernatorial election thanks to a successful online campaign but he quit the party after it failed to pick up any seats in this year's upper house elections.
"The new leader will be AI," Koki Okumura, a doctoral student of AI research who described himself as an assistant to the new leader, told a news conference.
Details about the AI are yet to be decided, including when and how it will be implemented, said the 25-year-old student at Kyoto University, who will nominally be the party's leader.
READ MORE
Who owns Kenya?: 2pc control over half of arable land
Treasury pockets Sh245b from Safaricom sale
Mbadi: Cash raised from Safaricom shares sale to fund infrastructure
CS Joho on spot over licencing of Devki's multi-billion iron ore deal
Global firm acquires local insurance platform mTek
Gulf bank unveils financing solution for pilgrim travelers
Multi-sectoral network calls for Sh9.7 million grant funding application for resilient cities
Why banks are eying more auctions on loan defaulters
Motorists to enjoy Sh2 fuel discount in latest Safaricom-Vivo Energy partnership
Transporters hit as port's empty containers backlog crisis worsens
The AI will not dictate political activities of party members but will focus on decisions such as distribution of its resources among members, for example, said Okumura, who recently won a party contest to succeed Ishimaru.
While attracting media attention, the Path to Rebirth has struggled to win seats.
All of its 42 candidates lost in the June Tokyo assembly election. All of its 10 candidates who ran in the upper house election in July also lost.