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Constitutional Democratic Party (Japan)

Rikken Minseitō (立憲民政党, Constitutional Democratic Party) was one of the main political parties in pre-war Empire of Japan. It was commonly known as the Minseitō.

Rikken Minseitō
立憲民政党
LeaderOsachi Hamaguchi
Wakatsuki Reijirō
Machida Chūji
FoundedJune 1, 1927 (1927-06-01)[1]
DissolvedAugust 15, 1940 (1940-08-15)[2]
Preceded byKenseikai[3]
Seiyūhontō[3]
Merged intoImperial Rule Assistance Association[4]
HeadquartersSakurada-cho, Shiba-ku,
Tokyo City[5]
NewspaperMinsei[5]
IdeologyLiberalism[6]
Progressivism[7]
Gikai Chūshin Seiji[8]
Anti-Seiyūkai[9]
Conservatism[10]
Political positionCentre[4] to centre-left[11]
Headquarters of the Rikken Minseitō in Tokyo
Headquarters of its main rival, the Rikken Seiyūkai

History

The Minseitō was founded on 1 June 1927, by a merger of the Kenseikai and the Seiyu Hontō political parties.[12] Its leadership included Osachi Hamaguchi, Wakatsuki Reijirō, Yamamoto Tatsuo, Takejirō Tokonami, Adachi Kenzō, Koizumi Matajirō and Saitō Takao. The party platform was politically and economically more liberal than its major rival, the Rikken Seiyūkai, calling for rule by the Diet of Japan rather than bureaucrats or genrō, elimination of disparities in wealth, international cooperation, and protection of personal liberties.[13]

The Minseitō fielded many candidates in the February 1928 General Election, (the first to be held after the General Election Law), winning 217 seats in the Lower House, as opposed to 218 seats for the Seiyūkai. This resulted in a hung parliament.

In the following 1930 General Election, the Minseitō took 273 seats, as opposed to 174 seats for the Seiyūkai, which gave it an absolute majority. Minseitō president Osachi Hamaguchi, Herbert Bix referred to him as Hamaguchi Yūkō,[14] became Prime Minister. Hamaguchi's first priority was to address the effects of the 1929 Stock Market Crash through retrenchment of government spending, tightening the money supply and encouraging exports while stabilizing foreign investments through returning to a fixed exchange rate.[15]

During its tenure, the Minseitō also advocated a conciliatory foreign policy and ratified the London Naval Agreement of 1930. However, Hamaguchi fell victim to assassination on 14 November 1930 when he was shot in Tokyo Station by a member of an ultranationalist secret society. Wakatsuki Reijirō became acting Prime Minister, also from the Minseitō.

In 1931, Minseitō strongly opposed the Mukden Incident which was engineered by the Imperial Japanese Army.[16] The anti-war Foreign Minister Kijūrō Shidehara and Prime Minister Reijirō came under strong criticism for their intervention in military affairs and were accused of "serious corruption", and his government collapsed in 1931.

In the following 1932 General Election, some right-wing members defected to the Rikken Seiyūkai, which won an absolute majority of 301 seats. Seiyūkai president Inukai Tsuyoshi became prime minister.

The Minseitō was able to recover a very slight majority of 205 seats versus 175 seats for the Seiyūkai in the 1936 General Election only by adopting a more pro-military stance. However, the narrow margin again resulted in a hung parliament. The Minseitō dropped back down to 179 seats in the 1937 General Election, while the Seiyūkai retained all of its 175 seats, which continued the paralysis in the Diet of Japan.

On 15 August 1940 the Minseitō voted to dissolve itself into the Imperial Rule Assistance Association as part of Fumimaro Konoe's efforts to create a one-party state, and thereafter ceased to exist.

Party platform

  1. We should reflect the consensus of the people to the Imperial Diet and thoroughly enforce Parliament-centric politics under the rule of the Emperor.
  2. We should thrive in production through national adjustment, make the distribution fair, and remove the cause of social unrest.
  3. We should adhere to international justice in diplomatic relations and expand the principles of racial equality and resource disclosure.
  4. We should foster character, enlightening imagination, and self-motivated individuality, equalize learning opportunity, and actively promote the realization of education.
  5. We should make reorganization that adapt to the momentum for emerging by breaking the anachronistic bad practice that prevailing legislation, administration, and local self-government.

The first article is a text that provides for the politics centered on the House of Representatives so it shows the superiority of the lower house over the upper house.[17]

Ideology

Basic philosophy

While both the Minseitō and their rivals Rikken Seiyūkai advocated for a constitutional monarchy,[18] the Minseitō held onto a more liberal and progressive platform than their conservative opposition the Seiyūkai.[6] The Minseitō was established as an anti-Seiyūkai on 1 June 1927.[9] However the party was really more of a motley collection of politicians who wished to prevent the Seiyūkai from taking power.[19]

Under these circumstances, The Minseitō under the party's first president Hamaguchi.[20] came to advocate 'liberty' and 'progress'. He defined the Minseitō as a progressive party that respected individual liberty and originality.[20] In fact, over time, the Minseitō had grown into a progressive party aiming for freedom and equality in the course of fighting with the Seiyūkai.[21]

Gikai Chushin Seiji

The Minseitō aimed to establish a two-party system,[18] and the party has advocated "Parliament-centric politics" (議会中心政治, Gikai Chūshin Seiji).[8] This is due to the influence of former members of the Kenseikai legislators who have gained experience as politicians of party politics,[22] and it's an idea to oppose the Seiyūkai which advocates Kōshitsu Chūshinshugi (lit.'Imperial family centrism').[23] Seigō Nakano, the head of policymaking and public relations, declared that "The Minseitō will implement strong 'Parliament-centric politics' through good operation of the universal suffrage."[23] The Minseitō was the first political party in Japan to self-styled the "Democratic Party."[24]

Policies

The Minseitō was aimed at incremental democratization in cooperation with bureaucracy organization.[18] Because this party had many party members who were once bureaucrats.[18]

Organization

The headquarters of the Minseitō was in Sakurada-cho, Shiba-ku, Tokyo City.[5] In 1947, Shiba-ku became the current Minato, Tokyo due to the merger with Akasaka-ku and Azabu-ku.[25] Since the political parties at the time were not given corporate status, the land and building owners of the headquarters were not political parties.[5] The owner of the Minseitō Headquarters was Minoura Katsundo, Onimaru Gisai.[5]

The intraparty management of the Minseitō was autocracy by executives.[26] The Minseitō legislators had almost monopolized the management positions and the political activities of the party were centered on legislators.[26] The party rules stipulate that executives are publicly elected, but the party had become autocracy by executives because there was a motion at the convention that "It should be left to the president".[27]

Membership

The Minseitō had professed that it had 2 or 3 million members, however leaders did not know the exact number of members.[28] The party left the certificate for join/leave the party in the warehouse and did not neatly organize the membership list.[29] Additionally, there were also many dual membership and floating members.[28] For that reason, the exact number of the Minseitō is unknown.[5]

Some members who not legislators had formed an organization called Ingaidan (lit.'Corps outside the parliament').[26] They essentially worked unpaid for campaigns, escorts, communications, anti-government movements, and election struggles.[30] It's said that there were around 1,300 Ingaidan members in Tokyo Prefecture.[31]

Factions

In the Minseitō, factions called Kanryōha (lit.'Bureaucrat faction') and Tōjinha (lit.'Partisan faction') were in conflict.[27] Kanryōha members were at the center of the Minseitō.[32] They had an overwhelming ability to raise political funds because they were well-known in business community such as Mitsubishi zaibatsu.[32] They also had a strong connections to genrō and other privileged classes, so they had high policy-making ability.[32] And they were a collection of human resources that could rationalization administration, financial, and tax policies.[32] One more faction, Tōjinha was rallying under Adachi Kenzō who had a good reputation for astute skills in election campaign.[33] Tōjinha members had many politicians who were active in the democratic movements.[34] The younger age group of Tōjinha had a deep connection with a civil groups based on the middle class such as a youth political organization, and formed the left-wing of the party that demanded executives to implement populist policies.[34] However, a series of bankruptcies of local banks due to the financial crisis in the 1920s caused the decline of Tōjinha's a financial supporter, local business community. As a result, Tōjinha could not fully opposed to Kanryōha.[35]

Leaders

No. Name Portrait Term of office
Took Office Left Office
1 Osachi Hamaguchi   1 June 1927 13 April 1931
2 Wakatsuki Reijirō   13 April 1931 1 November 1934
- Machida Chūji
(Interim president)
  1 November 1934 20 January 1935
3 Machida Chūji   20 January 1935 15 August 1940

Election results

House of Representatives
Election year # of seats Change Status
1928
216 / 466
  Opposition
1930
273 / 466
  57 Government
1932
146 / 466
  127 Opposition
1936
205 / 466
  59 Government
1937
179 / 466
  26 Opposition

References

  1. ^ Inoue 2012, pp. 33, 258.
  2. ^ Inoue 2012, pp. 227, 260.
  3. ^ a b Uno 1991, p. 1042.
  4. ^ a b The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica. "Minseitō political party, Japan". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved March 23, 2020. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  5. ^ a b c d e f Awaya 1983, p. 172.
  6. ^ a b Inoue 2012, p. 48.
  7. ^ Inoue 2012, pp. 39–40, 45.
  8. ^ a b Inoue 2012, pp. 36–37.
  9. ^ a b Inoue 2012, p. 33.
  10. ^ Kisaka, Jun'ichiro [in Japanese]. 日本大百科全書(ニッポニカ)の解説 [The Nihon Dai Hyakka Zensho: Encyclopedia Nipponica's explanation]. kotobank.jp (in Japanese). The Asahi Shimbun Company. Retrieved December 20, 2020. その結果、政友会、民政党による保守二大政党対立時代が出現した。 (As a result, by the Seiyukai and the Minseito, an era of confrontation between the two conservative major parties had emerged.)
  11. ^ "Shokun!". Vol. 29, no. 9–10. Bungeishunjū. p. 198. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  12. ^ National Diet Library
  13. ^ Garon. The State and Labor in Modern Japan Page 137
  14. ^ Herbert P. Bix, Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan (New York, NY: HarperCollins, 2000), 208
  15. ^ Gordon. A Modern History of Japan: From Tokugawa Times to the Present
  16. ^ Young, Japan's Total Empire page 121
  17. ^ Inoue 2012, pp. 41–42.
  18. ^ a b c d Inoue 2012, p. ii.
  19. ^ Inoue 2012, p. 34.
  20. ^ a b Inoue 2012, p. 40.
  21. ^ Inoue 2012, p. 45.
  22. ^ Inoue 2012, p. 36.
  23. ^ a b Inoue 2012, p. 37.
  24. ^ Garon, Sheldon (1987). The state and labor in modern Japan. University of California Press. p. 137. ISBN 9780520068384.
  25. ^ Sawada, Kiyoshi [in Japanese]. "Shiba towa" 芝(しば)とは. kotobank.jp (in Japanese). The Asahi Shimbun Company. Retrieved June 19, 2020.
  26. ^ a b c Awaya 1983, p. 169.
  27. ^ a b Awaya 1983, p. 155.
  28. ^ a b Awaya 1983, p. 171.
  29. ^ Awaya 1983, pp. 171–172.
  30. ^ Awaya 1983, pp. 169–170.
  31. ^ Awaya 1983, p. 170.
  32. ^ a b c d Awaya 1983, p. 156.
  33. ^ Awaya 1983, pp. 156–157.
  34. ^ a b Awaya 1983, p. 157.
  35. ^ Awaya 1983, p. 168.

Further reading

constitutional, democratic, party, japan, this, article, about, 1930s, political, party, modern, party, constitutional, democratic, party, japan, rikken, minseitō, 立憲民政党, constitutional, democratic, party, main, political, parties, empire, japan, commonly, kno. This article is about the 1930s political party For the modern day party see Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan Rikken Minseitō 立憲民政党 Constitutional Democratic Party was one of the main political parties in pre war Empire of Japan It was commonly known as the Minseitō Rikken Minseitō 立憲民政党LeaderOsachi HamaguchiWakatsuki ReijirōMachida ChujiFoundedJune 1 1927 1927 06 01 1 DissolvedAugust 15 1940 1940 08 15 2 Preceded byKenseikai 3 Seiyuhontō 3 Merged intoImperial Rule Assistance Association 4 HeadquartersSakurada cho Shiba ku Tokyo City 5 NewspaperMinsei 5 IdeologyLiberalism 6 Progressivism 7 Gikai Chushin Seiji 8 Anti Seiyukai 9 Conservatism 10 Political positionCentre 4 to centre left 11 Politics of JapanPolitical partiesElectionsHeadquarters of the Rikken Minseitō in Tokyo Headquarters of its main rival the Rikken Seiyukai Contents 1 History 2 Party platform 3 Ideology 3 1 Basic philosophy 3 2 Gikai Chushin Seiji 4 Policies 5 Organization 5 1 Membership 5 2 Factions 5 3 Leaders 6 Election results 7 References 8 Further readingHistory EditThe Minseitō was founded on 1 June 1927 by a merger of the Kenseikai and the Seiyu Hontō political parties 12 Its leadership included Osachi Hamaguchi Wakatsuki Reijirō Yamamoto Tatsuo Takejirō Tokonami Adachi Kenzō Koizumi Matajirō and Saitō Takao The party platform was politically and economically more liberal than its major rival the Rikken Seiyukai calling for rule by the Diet of Japan rather than bureaucrats or genrō elimination of disparities in wealth international cooperation and protection of personal liberties 13 The Minseitō fielded many candidates in the February 1928 General Election the first to be held after the General Election Law winning 217 seats in the Lower House as opposed to 218 seats for the Seiyukai This resulted in a hung parliament In the following 1930 General Election the Minseitō took 273 seats as opposed to 174 seats for the Seiyukai which gave it an absolute majority Minseitō president Osachi Hamaguchi Herbert Bix referred to him as Hamaguchi Yukō 14 became Prime Minister Hamaguchi s first priority was to address the effects of the 1929 Stock Market Crash through retrenchment of government spending tightening the money supply and encouraging exports while stabilizing foreign investments through returning to a fixed exchange rate 15 During its tenure the Minseitō also advocated a conciliatory foreign policy and ratified the London Naval Agreement of 1930 However Hamaguchi fell victim to assassination on 14 November 1930 when he was shot in Tokyo Station by a member of an ultranationalist secret society Wakatsuki Reijirō became acting Prime Minister also from the Minseitō In 1931 Minseitō strongly opposed the Mukden Incident which was engineered by the Imperial Japanese Army 16 The anti war Foreign Minister Kijurō Shidehara and Prime Minister Reijirō came under strong criticism for their intervention in military affairs and were accused of serious corruption and his government collapsed in 1931 In the following 1932 General Election some right wing members defected to the Rikken Seiyukai which won an absolute majority of 301 seats Seiyukai president Inukai Tsuyoshi became prime minister The Minseitō was able to recover a very slight majority of 205 seats versus 175 seats for the Seiyukai in the 1936 General Election only by adopting a more pro military stance However the narrow margin again resulted in a hung parliament The Minseitō dropped back down to 179 seats in the 1937 General Election while the Seiyukai retained all of its 175 seats which continued the paralysis in the Diet of Japan On 15 August 1940 the Minseitō voted to dissolve itself into the Imperial Rule Assistance Association as part of Fumimaro Konoe s efforts to create a one party state and thereafter ceased to exist Party platform EditWe should reflect the consensus of the people to the Imperial Diet and thoroughly enforce Parliament centric politics under the rule of the Emperor We should thrive in production through national adjustment make the distribution fair and remove the cause of social unrest We should adhere to international justice in diplomatic relations and expand the principles of racial equality and resource disclosure We should foster character enlightening imagination and self motivated individuality equalize learning opportunity and actively promote the realization of education We should make reorganization that adapt to the momentum for emerging by breaking the anachronistic bad practice that prevailing legislation administration and local self government The first article is a text that provides for the politics centered on the House of Representatives so it shows the superiority of the lower house over the upper house 17 Ideology EditBasic philosophy Edit While both the Minseitō and their rivals Rikken Seiyukai advocated for a constitutional monarchy 18 the Minseitō held onto a more liberal and progressive platform than their conservative opposition the Seiyukai 6 The Minseitō was established as an anti Seiyukai on 1 June 1927 9 However the party was really more of a motley collection of politicians who wished to prevent the Seiyukai from taking power 19 Under these circumstances The Minseitō under the party s first president Hamaguchi 20 came to advocate liberty and progress He defined the Minseitō as a progressive party that respected individual liberty and originality 20 In fact over time the Minseitō had grown into a progressive party aiming for freedom and equality in the course of fighting with the Seiyukai 21 Gikai Chushin Seiji Edit The Minseitō aimed to establish a two party system 18 and the party has advocated Parliament centric politics 議会中心政治 Gikai Chushin Seiji 8 This is due to the influence of former members of the Kenseikai legislators who have gained experience as politicians of party politics 22 and it s an idea to oppose the Seiyukai which advocates Kōshitsu Chushinshugi lit Imperial family centrism 23 Seigō Nakano the head of policymaking and public relations declared that The Minseitō will implement strong Parliament centric politics through good operation of the universal suffrage 23 The Minseitō was the first political party in Japan to self styled the Democratic Party 24 Policies EditThe Minseitō was aimed at incremental democratization in cooperation with bureaucracy organization 18 Because this party had many party members who were once bureaucrats 18 Organization EditThe headquarters of the Minseitō was in Sakurada cho Shiba ku Tokyo City 5 In 1947 Shiba ku became the current Minato Tokyo due to the merger with Akasaka ku and Azabu ku 25 Since the political parties at the time were not given corporate status the land and building owners of the headquarters were not political parties 5 The owner of the Minseitō Headquarters was Minoura Katsundo Onimaru Gisai 5 The intraparty management of the Minseitō was autocracy by executives 26 The Minseitō legislators had almost monopolized the management positions and the political activities of the party were centered on legislators 26 The party rules stipulate that executives are publicly elected but the party had become autocracy by executives because there was a motion at the convention that It should be left to the president 27 Membership Edit The Minseitō had professed that it had 2 or 3 million members however leaders did not know the exact number of members 28 The party left the certificate for join leave the party in the warehouse and did not neatly organize the membership list 29 Additionally there were also many dual membership and floating members 28 For that reason the exact number of the Minseitō is unknown 5 Some members who not legislators had formed an organization called Ingaidan lit Corps outside the parliament 26 They essentially worked unpaid for campaigns escorts communications anti government movements and election struggles 30 It s said that there were around 1 300 Ingaidan members in Tokyo Prefecture 31 Factions Edit In the Minseitō factions called Kanryōha lit Bureaucrat faction and Tōjinha lit Partisan faction were in conflict 27 Kanryōha members were at the center of the Minseitō 32 They had an overwhelming ability to raise political funds because they were well known in business community such as Mitsubishi zaibatsu 32 They also had a strong connections to genrō and other privileged classes so they had high policy making ability 32 And they were a collection of human resources that could rationalization administration financial and tax policies 32 One more faction Tōjinha was rallying under Adachi Kenzō who had a good reputation for astute skills in election campaign 33 Tōjinha members had many politicians who were active in the democratic movements 34 The younger age group of Tōjinha had a deep connection with a civil groups based on the middle class such as a youth political organization and formed the left wing of the party that demanded executives to implement populist policies 34 However a series of bankruptcies of local banks due to the financial crisis in the 1920s caused the decline of Tōjinha s a financial supporter local business community As a result Tōjinha could not fully opposed to Kanryōha 35 Leaders Edit No Name Portrait Term of officeTook Office Left Office1 Osachi Hamaguchi 1 June 1927 13 April 19312 Wakatsuki Reijirō 13 April 1931 1 November 1934 Machida Chuji Interim president 1 November 1934 20 January 19353 Machida Chuji 20 January 1935 15 August 1940Election results EditHouse of Representatives Election year of seats Change Status1928 216 466 Opposition1930 273 466 57 Government1932 146 466 127 Opposition1936 205 466 59 Government1937 179 466 26 OppositionReferences Edit Inoue 2012 pp 33 258 Inoue 2012 pp 227 260 a b Uno 1991 p 1042 a b The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica Minseitō political party Japan Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved March 23 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help a b c d e f Awaya 1983 p 172 a b Inoue 2012 p 48 Inoue 2012 pp 39 40 45 a b Inoue 2012 pp 36 37 a b Inoue 2012 p 33 Kisaka Jun ichiro in Japanese 日本大百科全書 ニッポニカ の解説 The Nihon Dai Hyakka Zensho Encyclopedia Nipponica s explanation kotobank jp in Japanese The Asahi Shimbun Company Retrieved December 20 2020 その結果 政友会 民政党による保守二大政党対立時代が出現した As a result by the Seiyukai and the Minseito an era of confrontation between the two conservative major parties had emerged Shokun Vol 29 no 9 10 Bungeishunju p 198 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help National Diet Library Garon The State and Labor in Modern Japan Page 137 Herbert P Bix Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan New York NY HarperCollins 2000 208 Gordon A Modern History of Japan From Tokugawa Times to the Present Young Japan s Total Empire page 121 Inoue 2012 pp 41 42 a b c d Inoue 2012 p ii Inoue 2012 p 34 a b Inoue 2012 p 40 Inoue 2012 p 45 Inoue 2012 p 36 a b Inoue 2012 p 37 Garon Sheldon 1987 The state and labor in modern Japan University of California Press p 137 ISBN 9780520068384 Sawada Kiyoshi in Japanese Shiba towa 芝 しば とは kotobank jp in Japanese The Asahi Shimbun Company Retrieved June 19 2020 a b c Awaya 1983 p 169 a b Awaya 1983 p 155 a b Awaya 1983 p 171 Awaya 1983 pp 171 172 Awaya 1983 pp 169 170 Awaya 1983 p 170 a b c d Awaya 1983 p 156 Awaya 1983 pp 156 157 a b Awaya 1983 p 157 Awaya 1983 p 168 Further reading EditAwaya Kentaro in Japanese 1983 Showa no Seito Showa no Rekishi in Japanese Vol 6 Tokyo Shogakukan Inc ISBN 978 4093760065 Sims Richard 1990 Japanese Political History Since the Meiji Renovation 1868 2000 University of California Press ISBN 0 520 06838 6 Uno Shun ichi in Japanese 1991 Nihon zenshi Japan chronik in Japanese Tokyo Kodansha Ltd ISBN 4 06 203994 X Young Louise 1999 Japan s Total Empire Manchuria and the Culture of Wartime Imperialism University of California Press ISBN 0 520 21934 1 Bix Herbert P 2000 Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan New York NY HarperCollins Publishers Inc ISBN 0 06 019314 X Garon Sheldon 2001 The State and Labor in Modern Japan Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 312 23915 7 Gordon Andrew 2008 A Modern History of Japan From Tokugawa Times to the Present Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 533922 2 Inoue Toshikazu in Japanese 2012 Seiyukai to Minseitō senzen no nidai seitōsei ni nani o manabu ka Chuko Shinsho in Japanese Tokyo Chuokoron Shinsha ISBN 978 4 12 102192 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Constitutional Democratic Party Japan amp oldid 1104122159, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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