Tokyo: Shinzo Abe has seized a "super-majority" in Japan's parliament but failed to win the hearts and minds of voters suspicious of his nationalist instincts and unenthused by his drive to change the country's pacifist constitution.
Abe now has the parliamentary numbers to start a process that would bolster the role of the military -- an ambition he has long cherished.
But the victory was far from a ringing endorsement of the 63-year-old veteran -- whose popularity ratings have sagged in the face of scandal -- and more a win by default after he trounced a disorganised opposition.
The election confirmed Abe's "difficult relations with the Japanese people", said Tobias Harris, Japanese politics expert at the Washington-based Teneo Intelligence consultancy.
"There is a certain amount of appreciation for certain aspects of what he has done." But, said Harris, "he is not loved."
An exit poll by Kyodo News showed more than half of voters (51 percent) do not trust their prime minister, while a survey by the liberal Asahi newspaper found 47 percent of those questioned would like to see someone else in charge of Japan.
Only a few months ago, that was starting to look like a possibility.
Abe was fighting for his political survival, embroiled in scandal and smarting from an embarrassing defeat in Tokyo municipal elections.
When he suddenly announced snap polls last month, critics saw it as an opportunistic manoeuvre to take advantage of a weak opposition and divert attention from his own woes, including allegations of favouritism to a friend in a business deal -- which the premier strongly denies.
For a short while it looked as if Abe's gambit could backfire spectacularly. The media-savvy and charismatic Governor of Tokyo, Yuriko Koike, unveiled a new party in a blaze of publicity and dominated TV broadcasts and the front pages for days.
The creation of her Party of Hope sparked an unprecedented transformation in the lethargic world of Japanese politics.
The main opposition Democratic Party (DP) effectively disbanded as scores of lawmakers jumped on Koike's bandwagon, which -- while ideologically similar to Abe's -- at least had the whiff of a fresh coat of paint.
Meanwhile, left-leaning DP members banded together to form a new progressive party, the Constitutional Democrats.
In the event, neither party could organise a nationwide campaign in the short time available and both fizzled.
"As it turned out, the Party of Hope is hopeless," said Michael Cucek from Temple University.
It could be ten years before there is an effective opposition capable of forming a government, said Teneo's Harris.
Having seen off all comers and secured a two-thirds majority in the lower house, Abe now has effective control of the executive and the legislature.
He will likely use the victory to start the lengthy process of amending the constitution, a personal passion for Abe and a select band of fellow right-wingers but largely anathema for most Japanese.