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Kyoto At-large District
The is a constituency that represents Kyoto Prefecture in the House of Councillors of Japan, House of Councillors of the Diet of Japan. It has four Councillors in the 242-member house. Outline The constituency represents the entire population of Kyoto Prefecture. Since its inception in 1947, the district has elected four Councillors to six-year terms, two at alternating elections held every three years. The district has 2,088,383 registered voters as of September 2015. The Councillors currently representing Kyoto are: * Tetsuro Fukuyama (Democratic Party (Japan, 2016), Democratic Party, third term; term ends in 2016.) * Satoshi Ninoyu (Liberal Democratic Party (Japan), Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), second term; term ends in 2016.) * Shoji Nishida (LDP, second term; term ends in 2019.) * Akiko Kurabayashi (Japanese Communist Party (JCP), first term; term ends in 2019) Elected Councillors Election results ...
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Ikuo Oyama
(20 September 1880 – 30 November 1955) was a Japanese academic, politician, political scientist and writer. Biography He graduated from Waseda University in 1905, before graduating from the University, universities, University of Chicago, Chicago and Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Munich. He was described as politically liberal and was quite active in the peace movement. He was a member of the left-leaning Labour-Farmer Party, which advocated universal suffrage, minimum wages, and women's rights, which were non-existent in Japan at that time. Yamamoto Senji, a colleague of his, was assassinated on February 29, on the same day as he had presented testimony in the Japanese Diet regarding torture of prisoners. The Labour-Farmer Party was banned in 1928 due to accusations of having links to communism. Oyama fled Japan in 1933 to the United States as a result. He got a job at Northwestern University at its library and political science department. During his exile, he wo ...
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1974 Japanese House Of Councillors Election
House of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 7 July 1974, electing half the seats in the House. The Liberal Democratic Party won the most seats. This election has been marked by polar opposite predictions by political commentators, some claiming that the LDP would see diasterous results following severe price inflation and the 1973 oil crisis, although as the election approached, others confidently believed the LDP would see marked success following shifts in forecasts. The results ended up somewhere in between, with the LDP falling down to 126 seats, exactly half barely holding onto a thin majority by enlisting the help of two LDP-aligned independents. The biggest winner among the opposition was the Japanese Communist Party, the only major party to see an increase in the popular vote. Its number of seats was doubled, thanks to skillful allocation of votes for specific candidates, with many JCP candidates spread equitably among the lower ranks of the national district res ...
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1971 Japanese House Of Councillors Election
House of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 27 June 1971,Table 13: Persons Elected and Votes Polled by Political Parties - Ordinary Elections for the House of Councillors (1947–2004)
electing half the seats in the House. The Liberal Democratic Party won the most seats.


Results


By constituency


Refe ...
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1968 Japanese House Of Councillors Election
House of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 7 July 1968,Table 13: Persons Elected and Votes Polled by Political Parties - Ordinary Elections for the House of Councillors (1947–2004)
electing half the seats in the House. The Liberal Democratic Party won the most seats, although this marked the first House of Councillors election in the LDP's history in w ...
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Yukio Hayashida
was a Japanese politician and former member of the House of Councillors. Hayashida served as the governor of Kyoto from April 16, 1978 until April 15, 1986. He later became the Minister of Justice from November 6, 1987 to December 27, 1988. Hayashida was born in Maizuru, Kyoto and died of heart failure at the age of 91 in Tokyo Tokyo (; ja, 東京, , ), officially the Tokyo Metropolis ( ja, 東京都, label=none, ), is the capital and List of cities in Japan, largest city of Japan. Formerly known as Edo, its metropolitan area () is the most populous in the world, .... References External links Yukio Hayashida obituary 1915 births 2007 deaths Government ministers of Japan Governors of Kyoto Members of the House of Councillors (Japan) People from Maizuru University of Tokyo alumni {{Japan-politician-stub ...
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1965 Japanese House Of Councillors Election
House of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 4 July 1965,Table 13: Persons Elected and Votes Polled by Political Parties - Ordinary Elections for the House of Councillors (1947–2004)
electing half the seats in the House. The Liberal Democratic Party won the most seats.


Results


By constituency


Refere ...
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1962 Japanese House Of Councillors Election
House of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 1 July 1962,Table 13: Persons Elected and Votes Polled by Political Parties - Ordinary Elections for the House of Councillors (1947–2004)
Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications
electing half the seats in the House. The Liberal Democratic Party (Japan), Liberal Democratic Party won the most seats. This was the first Japanese national election to feature the Kōmeitō (1962–1998), Kōmeitō as a candidate, as it had formed earlier in the same year. As is typical for House of Councillors elections, candidate personality and public appeal played a stronger role than they would in a House of Representatives election; the first place winner for the national distr ...
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1959 Japanese House Of Councillors Election
House of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 2 June 1959,Table 13: Persons Elected and Votes Polled by Political Parties - Ordinary Elections for the House of Councillors (1947–2004)
electing half the seats in the House. The Liberal Democratic Party won the most seats.
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House Of Representatives (Japan)
The is the lower house of the National Diet of Japan. The House of Councillors is the upper house. The composition of the House is established by and of the Constitution of Japan. The House of Representatives has 465 members, elected for a four-year term. Of these, 176 members are elected from 11 multi-member constituencies by a party-list system of proportional representation, and 289 are elected from single-member constituencies. The overall voting system used to elect the House of Representatives is a parallel system, a form of semi-proportional representation. Under a parallel system the allocation of list seats does not take into account the outcome in the single seat constituencies. Therefore, the overall allocation of seats in the House of Representatives is not proportional, to the advantage of larger parties. In contrast, in bodies such as the German ''Bundestag'' or the New Zealand Parliament the election of single-seat members and party list members is linked, so ...
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1963 Japanese General Election
General elections were held in Japan on 21 November 1963. The result was a victory for the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which won 283 of the 467 seats. Voter turnout was 71.1%. Most commentators believed that the election results would not radically alter the Japanese political landscape, and this was confirmed in the results, which did not see any party win or lose a large amount of seats. Although the LDP lost 13 seats, 12 LDP-aligned independents were also elected. The highest gain in seats came from the Democratic Socialist Party (DSP), which tactically fielded far fewer candidates than the previous elections and concentrated on fewer districts, gaining six seats, which was more than any of the other opposition parties gained. The elections also saw the defeat of two former prime ministers; Tetsu Katayama of the DSP (formerly of the JSP) and Tanzan Ishibashi of the LDP. Results By prefecture References {{Japanese elections Japan Japan ( ja, 日本, or ...
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1956 Japanese House Of Councillors Election
House of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 8 July 1956,Table 13: Persons Elected and Votes Polled by Political Parties - Ordinary Elections for the House of Councillors (1947–2004)
electing half the seats in the House plus two vacant seats in the other half. The Liberal Democratic Party won the most seats, b ...
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