A former town mayor who resigned over 99 sexual harassment allegations has been elected as a town councilor, officials said Monday, sparking anger and shock online.

Hideo Kojima, 75, stepped down in March last year after an official investigation accused him of incidents of harassment in the town of Ginan in Gifu Prefecture, including touching a colleague's breasts and buttocks.

An official in the town said that Kojima had been elected, with the town website showing he came in second among the 10 candidates who won seats.

"It proves residents trust me," Kojima told a local TV network on Monday, and warning, "Don't ever mention (sexual harassment claims) again."

Online users expressed shock over the election results.

"So voters in the town don't care about employees who were sexually harassed? Shame on you," one user said on social media platform X.

"I'm so shocked I'm speechless. I'm sorry for the women employees," wrote another on the Yahoo Japan platform.

At a news conference last year, he denied some of the cases and wiped away tears as he described his brother scolding him.

He said he didn't hug women employees as outlined in the investigation report, explaining that his gestures might have looked like hugs, but were not.

During its investigation, the committee conducted a survey among 193 workers in Kojima's municipality.

Of the 161 who responded, around 53% of men and 58% of women said the mayor had done something that made them feel uncomfortable.

According to broadcaster NHK, Kojima said he had not read the whole report, which alleged that he would tell subordinates that "his hands were fair and smooth ... to force female employees to touch them."

The report said he would also "show off his legs by rolling up his trousers, and tell them to touch."

Some workers said they used disinfectant spray after he touched them, the report said. It also detailed inappropriate remarks and demands such as asking an employee to bend over.

The probe, launched following reports in the weekly Shukan Bunshun magazine, said the mayor had often patted women workers on their heads.

Kojima said this was meant to "express gratitude."

Japan ranked 118th among 148 nations in the World Economic Forum's gender gap index in 2025 and has a low ratio of women politicians.

The global #MeToo movement was slow to pick up in Japan, with many victims said to be too scared to come forward, but a handful of high-profile cases have recently forced a reckoning.