Japan’s governing Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has elected a new leader in a tight runoff vote.
This decision that will likely shape the nation’s next prime minister and influence its political direction amid public frustration and economic uncertainty.
The primary came down to a face-off between two of the front-runners: Shinjiro Koizumi, the 44-year-old son of a former prime minister, and Sanae Takaichi, a conservative 64-year-old conservative follower of the late Shinzo Abe.
The winner faces a monumental challenge of glueing the party back together and healing the electorate following the defeat of the LDP government in both the upper house and the lower house by its coalition partner under incumbent Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba.
It was a close call in the first round, but Takiichi won with a slim margin of 183 to 164 against Koizumi.
However, in the crucial second-round, Koizumi was generally expected to be at an advantage because LDP legislators have far more say than rank-and-file members when it comes to matters of their party.
The decision is a radical one for Japan. A Koizumi win would see him become the youngest prime minister since the end of World War I in the country.
He has been viewed as a moderate, and in his promises, he has committed to containing the issue of cost-of-living without compromising fiscal discipline.
A more transformative and conservative vision is provided by Takichi, who has cited Margaret Thatcher as an inspiration.
She is a stridently pro-Abenomics supporter, urging more aggressive fiscal stimulus, and holds nationalist ideas on both foreign and domestic policy, which could shake financial markets and lead to strained relations with neighbours such as China.
Whoever is officially made a prime minister inherits a party in crisis, a rising populist opposition, and a population bored by political instability.
The result will be an indicator of whether Japan will take the road back to the Abe stability or a new and younger path.