
South China Morning Post · Feb 23, 2026 · Collected from RSS
Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and her government have become the focus of a coordinated, long-term online smear campaign orchestrated by thousands of social media accounts, according to new research. A study by Tokyo-based Japan Nexus Intelligence, which analyses digital public discourse, found that some 3,000 accounts had been actively posting malicious content about Takaichi since late January. The activity surged roughly a week before campaigning for the House of Representatives...
Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and her government have become the focus of a coordinated, long-term online smear campaign orchestrated by thousands of social media accounts, according to new research.A study by Tokyo-based Japan Nexus Intelligence, which analyses digital public discourse, found that some 3,000 accounts had been actively posting malicious content about Takaichi since late January.The activity surged roughly a week before campaigning for the House of Representatives election began on January 27, the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper reported on Monday.Posts in both English and Japanese circulated a range of claims, including that “the prime minister has opened the path to military expansion and historical revisionism”, that she “bought votes from the Unification Church” and that “social security burdens on the younger generation are increasing”.Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi prepares to deliver her policy speech during the House of Representatives plenary session in Tokyo on Friday. Photo: AFPThe Japanese-language messages exhibited awkward phrasing and linguistic quirks that suggested machine translation, as well as the use of simplified Chinese characters not found in Japan. The account names blended Japanese katakana script with Chinese characters, known as kanji.Roughly one-third of the accounts generated original posts, while the rest amplified them through reposts. Most had only a few entries each, a pattern analysts said reflected an effort to avoid detection.