was a conservative political party in Japan founded by Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike. The party was founded just before the call of the 2017 Japanese general election. The party's ideology was mainly Japanese conservatism and nationalism. Kibà  no Tà  merged with the Democratic Party to form the Democratic Party for the People on 7 May 2018; however, some right-wing populist members decided to form a new party with the same name. In October 2021, the party disbanded a second time.
In the 2016 Tokyo gubernatorial election, Governor Koike was elected as the Governor with membership of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) even though she was not the official candidate of the party. She then formed the regional party Tomin First no Kai, which was founded for the 2017 Tokyo prefectural election. The Komeito party supported Governor Koike in the metropolitan council, even though they were part of the coalition government with the LDP at the national level. At this time, the party was described as centre-right.
On 25 September 2017, after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had called 2017 Japanese general election for 22 October, Koike announced that she will found a national party called Kibà  no Tà  based on the Tomin First no Kai. Because Kibà  no Tà  at the time declared it as a centrist liberal party, the support rate of it was once ranked the second among political parties in Japan briefly after its foundation. The largest opposing party Democratic Party (DP) at the time, troubled by its continuous low support rate since 2012, announced that the party had abandoned plans to contest the 2017 general election because Seiji Maehara, a conservative in DP and the leader of DP at the time, decided to start the merger with Kibà  no Tà Â. The DP caucus in the House of Representatives disbanded, with many of the party's existing representatives contesting the election as candidates for Kibà  no Tà Â. This led to the split on 2 October 2017 of the Constitutional Democratic Party (CDP), which consists of left-leaning and liberal DP politicians whom Koike had rejected as Kibà  no Tà  candidates.
It was reported that the Kibà  no Tà  is tightly connected to some far-right organizations like Ganbare Nippon founded by Satoru Mizushima. Some members of Kibà  no Tà Â, such Nariaki Nakayama, are also far-right. The support rate of Kibà  no Tà  then dramatically decreased before the election and finally it only won 50 seats, even lower than the newly-founded Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (CDPJ). In the 2017 Kibà  no Tà  leadership election held on 10 November, Yà «ichirà  Tamaki was elected in the caucus election by a margin of 39 to 14. Koike resigned as party leader on 14 November as a result of the poor performance in the general election, leaving Tamaki as a sole leader. On 24 April 2018, the leadership of Kibà  and the Democratic Party (DP) announced in a joint press conference that both parties agreed to merge in May 2018 under the name Democratic Party for the People (DPFP). Several factions in both parties do not plan to join the new party. The members of these factions are expected to form their own splinter party, join other parties or become independents.
Prior to the merger, far-right members of Kibà  led by Shigefumi Matsuzawa stated that they intended to form a separate party that retains the Kibà  no Tà  name. The party was formed on 7 May 2018, on the same day with the DPFP merger. On 5 June 2018, Former Secretary-general Kuniko Koda left the party, so Kibà  no Tà  lost its legal status as a political party and became a political organization.
On 28 May 2019, Matsuzawa resigned as party leader, and Nariaki Nakayama became the new party leader. On 10 October 2021, Nakayama, the only member of the Diet, did not run for the next House of Representatives election and indicated his intention to retire from politics. On 18 October, Nakayama officially announced his retirement at a press conference, revealing that the party he represented had dissolved on 1 October.