Daily Press (Sunday)

NC welcomes historic visit from Japan’s prime minister

Kishida, Cooper tour companies, meet with students

- By Makiya Seminera

RALEIGH, N.C. — Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida cemented economic links and cultural amity with North Carolina on Friday during his U.S. visit, checking up on benchmark Japanese companies building in the state and meeting with students.

In between, Kishida lunched at the governor’s mansion in Raleigh, a historic first for the head of a foreign country in the state. Japan is North Carolina’s largest source of foreign direct investment, where over 200 Japanese companies have set up shop, employing over 30,000 people, according to Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper.

“I am honored to be here in North Carolina to showcase the multilayer­ed and strong ties between Japan and the United States,” Kishida said through a translator.

He called North Carolina “a state at the forefront of the times” and flexed his knowledge about its landmarks, mentioning Kill Devil Hills, where the Wright Brothers had their first successful flight, as an example of the state’s ingenuity.

Kishida, who has been Japan’s prime minister since 2021, said before his trip that he chose to stop in North Carolina to show that the Japan-U.S. partnershi­p extends beyond Washington, according to a translatio­n posted on his website.

Kishida, Cooper and others traveled to the Greensboro area for morning visits to a Honda Aircraft Co. production facility, as well as to the constructi­on site for a Toyota Motor Corp. electric and hybrid battery plant that is expected to ultimately employ more than 5,000 people.

Chiaki Takagi, a Japanese studies lecturer at the University of North Carolina Greensboro, said this week that the prime minister’s visit surprised her but that it could signal a “positive future partnershi­p” between Japan and the U.S. and more Japanese workers coming to the state.

“This whole thing will provide the area with opportunit­ies to be engaged in very active cultural exchange between Japan and the U.S.,” Takagi said.

The luncheon marked the first time a foreign head of state has visited the governor’s mansion since record-keeping began in 1891, the state Department of Natural and Cultural Resources said.

“What a better way to start than with one of our closest allies and friends from the country of Japan, with whom we share so many common interests,” Cooper said at the luncheon. “So today we make history, welcoming our wonderful friends.”

Cooper made trips to Tokyo in 2017 and 2023 during his time as governor. When it was announced Kishida was coming to the U.S., Rahm Emanuel, U.S. ambassador to Japan, said during the luncheon Cooper was the first to call to ask for the prime minister to visit his state. Kishida, Cooper and others went to North Carolina State University in Raleigh later Friday, where they met students ranging from middle school to adults studying Japanese. They visited the university’s Japan Center, which was establishe­d by former Gov. Jim Hunt and others in 1980 following a state trade mission to Tokyo. N.C. State has long ties with Japan’s Nagoya University.

Earlier Friday, Kishida’s wife, Yuko, and North Carolina first lady Kristin Cooper shared a traditiona­l Japanese tea in Durham.

 ?? LOGAN CYRUS/GETTY ?? North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, left, and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida take a tour of a new Toyota battery factory in Lincoln, N.C.
LOGAN CYRUS/GETTY North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, left, and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida take a tour of a new Toyota battery factory in Lincoln, N.C.

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