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TOKYO (Reuters) -Japanese premier Shigeru Ishiba vowed to stay on after his ruling coalition suffered a bruising defeat in upper house elections on Sunday as some of his own party discussed his future ...
PM Ishiba's coalition was projected to have lost its majority in the upper house, a result that might push him to resign.
Japan PM Shigeru Ishiba’s coalition loses upper house majority, deepening political instability amid voter anger over ...
Japan's ruling coalition, led by Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, failed to secure a majority in the upper house election, ...
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Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba was clinging on Monday even after his coalition disastrously lost its upper house ...
TOKYO: With the Liberal Democratic Party likely having performed poorly in Sunday's (July 20) House of Councillors election, ...
Ishiba said the coalition's poor showing was because his government’s measures to combat price increases had yet to reach ...
SYDNEY: Asian shares and the yen held their ground on Monday as Japanese elections proved bad for the government but no worse ...
HONG KONG] Equities mostly rose on Monday on optimism countries will reach US trade deals before an August 1 deadline, while ...
Asian equities were broadly higher on Monday as investors assessed the implications of ongoing geopolitical tensions, steady ...
The Indian market ended lower on Friday, dragged down by broad-based selling and disappointing earnings across key sectors.