Taku Yamamoto

Taku Yamamoto
山本 拓
Official portrait, 2006
Spouse of the Prime Minister of Japan
Assumed role
21 October 2025
MonarchNaruhito
Prime MinisterSanae Takaichi
Preceded byYoshiko Ishiba
Member of the House of Representatives
In office
9 November 2003 – 14 October 2021
Preceded byTakamori Makino
Succeeded byMulti-member district
ConstituencyFukui 2nd (2003–2014)
Hokuriku-Shin'etsu PR (2014–2021)
In office
18 February 1990 – 27 September 1996
Preceded byHajime Fukuda
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
ConstituencyFukui at-large
Member of the Fukui Prefectural Assembly
In office
22 April 1983 – 17 February 1990
ConstituencySabae City
Personal details
BornTaku Yamamoto
(1952-07-07) 7 July 1952 (age 73)
PartyLDP (until 1994; 2000–present)
Other political
affiliations
NFP (1994–1996)
Independent (1996–2000)
Spouse
(m. 2004; div. 2017)
(m. 2021)
Children3
Alma materHosei University
OccupationLinguistpolitician

Taku Yamamoto (Japanese: 山本 拓, Hepburn: Yamamoto Taku; born 7 July 1952), legally Taku Takaichi (高市 拓, Takaichi Taku), is a Japanese politician of the Liberal Democratic Party. A member of the Liberal Democratic Party,[1] he was a member of the House of Representatives from 2003 to 2021.

Political career

Yamamoto was a member of the House of Representatives until 2021, when he lost his seat. A native of Sabae, Fukui and graduate of Hosei University. He was elected to the first of his two terms in the assembly of Fukui Prefecture in 1983, and to the House of Representatives for the first time in 1990. After losing his seat in 1996, he ran unsuccessfully for the governorship of Fukui Prefecture in 1999. He was re-elected to the House of Representatives in 2003.

Personal life

He married Sanae Takaichi, a fellow member of the House of Representatives, in 2004. Yamamoto's younger brother served as a parliamentary aide in her office. They agreed to a divorce in July 2017, with Takaichi citing differing political views and aspirations as the reason for the divorce.[2] However, they rekindled their marriage in December 2021,[3] and he adopted Takaichi's surname.[4] She became president of the Liberal Democratic Party[3] and ultimately prime minister of Japan in 2025, the first woman in the roles. Yamamoto was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2024[5] and suffered from a cerebral infarction in 2025, leaving the right side of his body unable to move. Takaichi serves as his carer.[6] His eldest son, Ken Yamamoto, serves as a prefectural assembly member in Fukui.[7]

See also

References