Title: The New Face of Japanese Politics?
1The New Face of Japanese Politics?
2Strong contender prime ministerial hopeful
Junichiro Koizumi accepts flowers at a reception
hosted by a faction of his Liberal Democratic
Party at a Tokyo hotel. Mr Koizumi quit his
faction to gain broader appeal.
3End to faction friction probably fiction
- Factions are not separated by ideology, because
Japanese politics is less about policies than
personalities. The factions thrive on personal
relationships. New members of the LDP join one of
the factions and give the faction leader their
loyalty and vote. In return, they are given
political support and campaign funds. They work
their way up through the faction until they
become a senior member or even faction leader,
and the name of the faction changes.
4Tanaka Makiko and Koizuimi Junichiro
5Firebrand lashes 'indecisive' PM
- Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has suffered a
potentially devastating attack on his reform
credentials by the woman who propelled him to
power his former foreign minister, Makiko
Tanaka. - In the first interview since her dramatic
midnight sacking sent the cabinet's ratings
tumbling by more than 20 per cent, Ms Tanaka
accused the Prime Minister of being envious,
indecisive and a prisoner of the faction system
he promised to destroy.
6Firebrand lashes 'indecisive' PM
- She accused Mr Koizumi of allowing his cabinet to
be run by one of the most reviled faction bosses
in the LDP - former prime minister Yoshiro Mori. - Her tenure in office was plagued by battles with
LDP leaders and bureaucrats who were not used to
dealing with a minister who did not take orders.
They leaked stories about her tantrums, but when
she complained, a senior figure in the Mori
action told her the best way to ensure civil
servants' loyalty was to do what they said.
7Bevy of ninja 'assassins' to serve 'last samurai'
Koizumi in election
- Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has staked his
political future on the poll and his prime weapon
for defeating high profile defectors from the
Ruling Liberal Democratic Party who oppose his
plan to privatize Japan's postal system is a bevy
of the best and brightest daughters of the Land
of the Rising Son. - Koizumi insiders say the result of the Sept. 11
poll will hinge on female voters, and the prime
minister sees the women running on his side as
shikaku (??)," a term that literally means
assassins, but is being used in this election to
describe "killer candidates."
"The LDP is no longer a liberal or democratic
party," he (Kobayashi, a rebel) protested at a
recent press conference between the two
candidates (Kobayshi and Koike).
8So, Koizumi seems to be changing the faction
based structure of the LDP.
- But who wants to rewrite the constitution?
9His Successor Shinzo Abe
10Politics
- Democratic miracle
- Tatemae structure of government
- Honne functioning of government
- Issues from cold war to corruption and
environment.
11Japans Political System
12The Parties in the System
13The Bureaucrats in the System
14How democratic is Japan?
- Are individual rights protected?
- Is the will of the people adequately transmitted
through the politicians to be made into laws? - How does group orientation persist in a
democratic system? - Does the the party system and bureaucratic
administration support or hinder democracy? - Are the issues the Japanese are concerned about
dealt with effectively?
15Democratic Miracle
- Democracy was an alien concept to Japan, but it
had - Foundations of stable governance political
unity, administrative efficiency, ethical
rationale. - Capacity for change regional differences,
tradition of borrowing, peaceful rotation of
leadership, emperor based shift,
entrepreneuralism. - Forced democratization to repeal the unequal
treaties American constitution and - institutions, entrance fee
- into Western alliance
16Tatemae the structure of the government system
- Sovereign Power from Emperor (?? tenno) to
constitution (?? kenpo) - The Diet (Kokkai??) houses of representatives
(Shugiin ???) and councilors (Sangiin ???),
representation for laws and cabinet appointments - The Executive Prime Minister (???? soridaijin),
cabinet (?? naikaku) and bureaucracy - The Judiciary (??? Shihobu) constitutionality of
laws and investigative courts - Local Government (??? chijitai) prefectures and
municipalities, elections and local issues, taxes
and central control
17Article 9 Of the Japanese Constitution
Renunciation of War
- Aspiring sincerely to an international peace
based on justice and order, the Japanese people
forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the
nation and the threat or use of force as means of
settling international disputes. - In order to accomplish the aim of the preceding
paragraph, land, sea, and air forces, as well as
other war potential, will never be maintained.
The right of belligerency of the state will not
be recognized.
18Individual Rights
- Article 11. The people shall not be prevented
from enjoying any of the fundamental human
rights. These fundamental human rights guaranteed
to the people by this Constitution shall be
conferred upon the people of this and future
generations as eternal and inviolate rights. - Article 12. The freedoms and rights guaranteed to
the people by this Constitution shall be
maintained by the constant endeavor of the
people, who shall refrain from any abuse of these
freedoms and rights and shall always be
responsible for utilizing them for the public
welfare. - Article 13. All of the people shall be respected
as individuals. Their right to life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness shall, to the extent
that it does not interfere with the public
welfare, be the supreme consideration in
legislation and in other governmental affairs. - Article 14. All of the people are equal under the
law and there shall be no discrimination in
political, economic or social relations because
of race, creed, sex, social status or family
origin.
19Individual rights expressed through
- Article 15. The people have the inalienable right
to choose their public officials and to dismiss
them. - Article 21. Freedom of assembly and association
as well as speech, press and all other forms of
expression are guaranteed. - Article 24. Marriage shall be based only on the
mutual consent of both sexes and it shall be
maintained through mutual cooperation with the
equal rights of husband and wife as a basis. - With regard to choice of spouse, property rights,
inheritance, choice of domicile, divorce and
other matters pertaining to marriage and the
family, laws shall be enacted from the standpoint
of individual dignity and the essential equality
of the sexes. - Article 26. All people shall have the right to
receive an equal education correspondent to their
ability, as provided by law. - Article 28. The right of workers to organize and
to bargain and act collectively is guaranteed. - Article 29. The right to own or to hold property
is inviolable. Property rights shall be defined
by law, in conformity with the public welfare.
20The Gift from Beate Sirota Gordon
- Born in Vienna, the daughter of a famed
Russian-Jewish pianist, she spent her childhood
in pre-war Tokyo, where her father was invited to
teach at a prestigious music academy. In 1938,
she was sent to California to study at Mills
College, renowned for its strong ideas on women's
rights. Fluent in six languages, she joined the
US war information office when America joined the
war. - She returned to Japan on Christmas Eve, 1945, to
search for her parents who had stayed there and
were imprisoned because of their background. One
of only a few Americans fluent in Japanese and
well versed in the culture, she landed a job with
General Douglas MacArthur, in the department that
drafted a new Japanese constitution - in seven
days. She was assigned to the civil rights
section, where she drafted women's rights
articles. She was only 22. - She knew exactly what it was like to be a
Japanese woman at that time, having witnessed the
reality of their pre-war life under the rule of
their fathers and husbands. Unless women were
happy, she thought, there would be no true peace
in Japan, and sexual equality was a prerequisite.
- Alas, most of her drafts on women's rights were
deleted at the screening stage despite her
tearful pleas - except for Article 24. It defined
sexual equality in marriage, in the choice of a
spouse, property rights, inheritance, divorce,
and so on - all revolutionary changes from
pre-war Japan.
21Generic Outline of Government Institutions
Constitution
Judiciary
Legislative
Executive
- Roles of Constitutions
- Establish the rights and obligations of the
people - Separate and designate the powers of government
22Regional/Local Governments 47 Prefectures
(Governors Assemblies) Cities, Towns, Villages
(Mayors and Councils)
Structure of Government
23Japans Political System
House of Representatives and House of Councillors
24Japans Electoral Systems
House of Councillors House of Representatives
Electoral Districts Electoral Districts Electoral Districts
Proportional representation 1 nationwide district 11 nationwide districts
Smaller districts 47 prefecture-level multi-member districts 300 single-seat electoral districts
Number of Members Number of Members Number of Members
Proportional representation 96 180
Smaller districts 146 300
Term 6 yrs (1/2 every 3 yrs 4 yrs (or earlier)
25Legislative Procedure
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27Government Administered Space
28 Number of Local Civil Service Employees (as of
April 1, 2002)
29Honne functioning of government
- Party factions
- Elections and electioneering
- Policy formulation legislative deal making
30Honne functioning of government
- Party (?? toha) factions (??habatzu)
- The LDPs internalized factions
- leader-follower groups,
- advancement ladder,
- party consensus formation,
- The externalized factions of the old left and the
new center
31The Political Spectrum
Center democratic, market economics, progressive
social policies
Old Left
LDP
Left
Right
Extreme left
Authoritarian, nationalistic, capitalistic
Authoritarian, nationalistic, state ownership
New Center
Extreme Right
Old Center Right Liberal Democratic Party
Old left Communists, Socialists, Democratic
Socialists
New center Democratic party of Japan, New
Komeito, Liberal Party, Social Democratic Party,
21st Century club
32House of Representatives (Sept 2005)
Number of Representatives
Liberal Democratic Party 295
Democratic party of Japan and Club of Independents 113
New Komeito 31
Communist Party 9
Social Democratic Party 7
The People's New Party and New Party Nippon and Group of Independents 6
Independents 19
Vacancies 0
33House of Councillors (Sept 2005)
Number of Representatives
Liberal Democratic Party 112
Democratic party of Japan and Shinryokufukukai 82
New Komeito 24
Communist Party 9
Social Democratic Party 6
The People's New Party, New Party Nippon 4
Independents 5
Vacancies 1
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36Honne functioning of government
- Elections and electioneering
- The new balance between minority representation
and change - disproportional representation
- local connections (the Koenkai ???) and party
discipline - money needs and noise.
37Honne functioning of government
- Policy formulation legislative deal making
- short duration ministers,
- continuous bureaucracy,
- bureaucratic control of Prime Ministers Office,
- bureaucratic turf wars,
- business governance and
- quasi-business operation
- interest group bargaining
- political party compromise
38Issues from cold war confrontation to corruption
and environment.
- Cold war ideological separation of parties to
alignment on market principles - Corruption transformation in perception of
politician, bureaucrat and business relations to
policy based politics - Environment central vs. local approaches, e.g.
nuclear power vs. local political power - The Rise of China economic threat, resources,
history, trade - Others the American alliance, the Constitution,
decentralization, deregulation, recession,
education, womens rights, aging population etc.
39Teacher temper over Japan flag lawsSome see
Koizumi's dispatch of troops to Iraq as a sign of
rising nationalism in Japan.
- But for some in Japan, the flag of the rising sun
and the lyrics to the "Kimigayo (The Emperor's
Reign)" anthem are painful reminders of the
militant nationalism that led to World War II. - Now, the government says public school teachers
must honor the flag, stand-up and sing the anthem
at school ceremonies, whether or not they agree. - If not, they may be fired.
40Teacher temper over Japan flag laws
- In April, around 180 teachers at metropolitan
senior high schools or schools for disabled
children were reprimanded for behaving
"unprofessionally" during graduation ceremonies
the previous month, the education board said. - English teacher Toru Kondo has repeatedly refused
to stand for the anthem. "Please stand up but
don't force people who don't like to stand up and
sing the national anthem," he said. "I will not
stand up, never stand up." - Some parents fear the effect the rules will have
on their children."These are my children. They
are not the hostages or resources of the Tokyo
Board of Education," one mother says.
The enforcement of the law, which was put forth
in 1999 by then prime minister Keizo Obuchi,
comes at a unique time in Japan's post-WWII
history. Current Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi
has recently sent troops from its Self Defense
Force to Iraq, amid much public fear the soldiers
could be drawn into conflict which would go
against Japan's pacifist 1947 constitution.
41SCMP Tuesday, May 11, 2004Japan's main
opposition leader stands down
- Naoto Kan has stepped down as leader
- of Japan's largest opposition party because
- he missed 10 months of mandatory pension
- payments, throwing his party into turmoil two
- months before elections.
- Mr Kan's resignation after 17 months as
- head of the Democratic Party of Japan follows
Yasuo - Fukuda quitting the post of chief government
spokesman on Friday after disclosing he skipped
pension contributions for more than three years. - Revelations that ministers and lawmakers from at
least three parties failed to pay pension
contributions has sparked public discontent at a
time when Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's
government is trying to raise payments and slash
retirement payouts.
42How democratic is Japan?
- Are individual rights protected?
- How does group orientation persist in a
democratic system? - Is the will of the people adequately transmitted
through the politicians to be made into laws? - Does the bureaucratic administration support or
hinder democracy? - Are the issues which concern the Japanese dealt
with effectively?
43Japans Voting Rate
44Minbo no Onna (anti-extortion woman)
- Minbo criminal acts disguised as civil law
actions - Storyline Abuse of the law by Yakusa (gangsters)
to extort money from a hotel and use of the law
by hotel staff to fight back - What expectations are both sides counting on?
- How does the lawyer enlist the help of the courts
and police? - How is local citizens power expressed in the
movie? - Where do you see the extreme right wing?