Japan’s new leader, Sanae Takaichi, has ripped up the globalist playbook and stepped into history as her country’s first woman to hold the premiership, winning the LDP leadership and moving quickly to assume the top job. Her rise came amid turbulence for the ruling party and fierce debates over national identity, defense, and economic survival — realities every patriotic nation must confront.
From the start Takaichi made clear she will tackle Japan’s existential demographic crisis head-on rather than surrender the country’s future to mass migration as a quick fix. She has proposed measures to strengthen oversight of foreign residents and to crack down on illegal activity that fuels public unease, signaling a firm, commonsense approach to law, order, and sovereignty.
Conservative Americans should cheer this. For years we’ve warned that open-door immigration policies engineered to paper over low birth rates only export social strain and dilute cohesive national cultures. A leader who puts family policy, cultural continuity, and secure borders first understands that nations are held together by shared values and by parents willing to raise the next generation.
Takaichi’s platform is unapologetically pro-natalist: incentivize families, reduce barriers to childbearing, and make it easier for husbands and wives to choose family over forced economic tradeoffs. This is precisely the kind of policy real conservatives have championed — tax relief for parents, better childcare, and cultural encouragement of marriage and child-rearing — instead of the technocratic, short-term bandage of unlimited labor inflows.
The political establishment in many Western capitals refuses to admit the obvious: replacing your people with newcomers is not a solution, it’s surrender. Takaichi’s insistence on addressing root causes — not importing workers to mask declining birthrates — is a model of national self-respect and prudence that should resonate with voters tired of being lectured by elites who live off the consequences of their own failed experiments.
Yes, Japan still recognizes the need for some foreign workers in specific sectors, but Takaichi’s posture is to control and regulate, not to open the floodgates and call it policy. Her government is already preparing ministerial discussions on how to tighten residency rules and prevent exploitation, steps that protect citizens and honest immigrants alike while restoring confidence in public safety and fairness.
If American conservatives want to save their own country’s future, they should study Takaichi’s approach: defend borders, defend families, and design policies that make it easier and more attractive to raise children. This isn’t xenophobia — it’s stewardship. It’s time to stop treating nations like interchangeable labor markets and start rebuilding societies that prize family, faith, and the future.






