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Politics of Osaka City, as in all
municipalities A municipality is usually a single administrative division having corporate status and powers of self-government or jurisdiction as granted by national and regional laws to which it is subordinate. The term ''municipality'' may also mean the g ...
of
Japan Japan ( ja, 日本, or , and formally , ''Nihonkoku'') is an island country in East Asia. It is situated in the northwest Pacific Ocean, and is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan, while extending from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north ...
, takes place in the framework of local autonomy that is guaranteed by chapter 8 of the
Constitution A constitution is the aggregate of fundamental principles or established precedents that constitute the legal basis of a polity, organisation or other type of entity and commonly determine how that entity is to be governed. When these prin ...
and laid out in the
Local Autonomy Law The , passed by the House of Representatives and the House of Peers on March 28, 1947 and promulgated as Law No. 67 of 1947 on April 17,Ministry of Justice, Japanese Law Translation Database SystemLocal Autonomy Act/ref> is an Act of devolution ...
. As one of Japan's 20 major cities designated by government ordinance (''seirei shitei toshi''), Osaka City has some administrative responsibilities that are handled by the prefectures in ordinary municipalities and is subdivided into wards. The administration is headed by a mayor directly elected by the people every four years in first-past-the-post elections. Enacting and amending city ordinances, passing the budget and approving important administrative appointments, including the vice-mayors and the treasurer, are handled by the city assembly that is directly elected by the people every four years by single-non transferable vote. As in all prefectures and municipalities, citizens may initiate ''chokusetsu seikyū'' ("direct demands"), i.e. mayor and assembly are subject to recall referendums, and the people can influence policies directly via petitions and plebiscites. Osaka City is the prefectural capital of
Osaka is a designated city in the Kansai region of Honshu in Japan. It is the capital of and most populous city in Osaka Prefecture, and the third most populous city in Japan, following Special wards of Tokyo and Yokohama. With a population of ...
and Japan's second largest incorporated city after
Yokohama, Kanagawa is the second-largest city in Japan by population and the most populous municipality of Japan. It is the capital city and the most populous city in Kanagawa Prefecture, with a 2020 population of 3.8 million. It lies on Tokyo Bay, south of To ...
. Political debate in Osaka City has in recent years been dominated by the Osaka Metropolis plan of former Osaka governor and current Osaka City mayor Tōru Hashimoto and his
Osaka Restoration Association The , also referred to as One Osaka, is a regional political party in Osaka Prefecture, Japan. Founded in 2010 by then-Governor Tōru Hashimoto, its main platform is pursuing the Osaka Metropolis plan of merging the prefecture and some of its c ...
. Under the plan, Osaka City and Osaka's other designated city, Sakai City, would be abolished, subdivided into special wards that have a status as municipalities but leave some municipal tasks and revenues to the prefectural administration. As mayor, Hashimoto has set up an office to prepare for the unification of city and prefectural administration.


Historical background

As one of Japan's three most important cities (the "three capitals", ''santo'':
Tokyo City was a municipality in Japan and part of Tokyo-fu which existed from 1 May 1889 until its merger with its prefecture on 1 July 1943. The historical boundaries of Tokyo City are now occupied by the Special Wards of Tokyo. The new merged go ...
, Osaka City and
Kyoto City Kyoto (; Japanese: , ''Kyōto'' ), officially , is the capital city of Kyoto Prefecture in Japan. Located in the Kansai region on the island of Honshu, Kyoto forms a part of the Keihanshin metropolitan area along with Osaka and Kobe. , the city ...
), wards (''ku'') as subdivisions of the city were set up in 1878 and are thereby older than the city as a modern administrative unit itself, and when (albeit limited) local autonomy was introduced for other municipalities in the 1880s, autonomy rights in Tokyo City, Osaka City and Kyoto City were limited by a special imperial decree: The governor of Osaka also took the role of mayor of Osaka City and there was no independent city executive. After the decree had been lifted in 1898, the administration evolved as in other major cities of Japan. Unlike Tokyo City, Osaka City was not dissolved by the central government in World War II. In 1947, the U.S. drafted constitution and the Local Autonomy Law created the current legal framework of local autonomy for the city. In 1956, it became one of the first five "designated major cities".


National representation

Osaka City is covered by six of Osaka's 19 electoral districts for the
House of Representatives House of Representatives is the name of legislative bodies in many countries and sub-national entitles. In many countries, the House of Representatives is the lower house of a bicameral legislature, with the corresponding upper house often ca ...
. Osaka's 1st through 5th districts only consist of wards of Osaka city, the 6th districts covers the Asahi and Tsurumi wards but also extends into other areas of Osaka, namely Moriguchi City and Kadoma City.


Prefectural representation

As in all designated cities, Osaka City's wards serve as electoral districts for the Osaka Prefectural Assembly. Most are single- or two-member districts. Together they elect 33 of the 109 members of the assembly.


Mayor

Osaka City's current mayor is Tōru Hashimoto who had resigned as Osaka governor in 2011 to run in the mayoral election against incumbent Kunio Hiramatsu. Hashimoto won a clear victory even though Hiramatsu was supported by the established parties including the Japanese Communist Party who had for the first time since 1963 not nominated their own mayoral candidate to prevent Hashimoto's alleged "fascist, dictatorial" policies. As mayor, Hashimoto supports the implementation of the Osaka Metropolis plan, opposes unions particularly the unions of public sector workers (local public servants union, teachers union, transportation workers union), and has taken an anti-nuclear stance in the energy policy debate after the earthquake in 2011. While Hashimoto's reformism is popular among his supporters not only in the city or the prefecture but nationwide (where he and his party threaten to contest elections if the national Diet obstructs his reforms), opponents see him as a populist and criticize his leadership style as authoritarian, also referred to as "Hashism" (ハシズム). Mayoral elections had been held as part of unified regional elections since 1947 until 1971 when Kaoru Chūma's death caused an early election. Previous independent mayors of Osaka City (for the governors of the prefecture who also had served as mayors of the prefectural capital before 1898, see the
List of governors of Osaka Prefecture Appointed governors *Daigo Tadamasa 1868 *Gotō Shōjirō 1868-1870 *Kimimasa Yuri 1870 *Yotsutsuji Nishi 1870-1872 *Norobu Watanabe 1872-1880 *Tateno Tsuyoshi 1880-1889 * Nishimura Sutezō 1889-1891 * Yamada Nobumichi 1891-1895 * Utsumi Tadakats ...
): # Tahee Tamura, 1898–1901, # Sadakichi Tsuruhara, 1901–1905, # Shigetake Yamashita, 1905–1909, # Shunpei Uemura, 1910–1912, # Kaneyuki Kimotsuke, 1913, # Shirō Ikegami, 1913–1923, #
Hajime Seki was the Mayor of Osaka, Japan, between 1923 and 1935. Early life Seki was born on the Izu Peninsula in Shizuoka on September 26, 1873. He graduated from the Koto Shogyo Gakko, now Hitotsubashi University, in 1893, and worked in the Ministry ...
, 1923–1935, # Takeo Kagami, 1935–1936, # Muneji Sakama, 1936–1945, # Mitsuji Nakai, 1945–1946, # Hiroo Kondō (I– S), 1 term, 1947–1951, the first mayor after the introduction of direct popular election, # Mitsuji Nakai (I), 3 terms, 1951–1963 # Kaoru Chūma (I–S,
JCP JCP may refer to: * Java Community Process, a method of handling software requests * J. C. Penney, a United States department store chain * Jenny Craig Pavilion, an arena at the University of San Diego * Jim Crockett Promotions, a former profession ...
, DSP), 3 terms, 1963–1971 (died in office), # Yasushi Ōshima (I– L,
Kōmeitō , formerly New Komeito and abbreviated NKP, is a conservative political party in Japan founded by lay members of the Buddhist Japanese new religious movement Soka Gakkai in 1964. Since 2012, it has served in government as the junior coalition ...
, DSP, additionally Socialist support in his third and fourth elections), 4 terms, 1971–1987, # Masaya Nishio, 2 terms, 1987–1995, # Takafumi Isomura (I), 2 terms, 1995–2003, # Jun'ichi Seki (I, Liberal Democratic and Kōmeitō support in the 2005 and 2007 elections), 2 terms, 2003–2005 (resigned) and 2005–2007, # Kunio Hiramatsu (I– D, PNP, additionally Liberal Democratic, Kōmeitō and JCP support in the 2011 election), 1 term, 2007–2011.


Council

The Osaka City Council (as in some other major cities ''shikai'', not ''shigikai'') has 86 members who are elected by single non-transferable vote every four years in unified regional elections. The wards serve as electoral districts, each elects between two and six council members. In the 2011 elections, Tōru Hashimoto's Osaka Restoration Assembly became strongest party in the council, at the same time also winning a plurality of seats in neighbouring Sakai City and a majority in the Osaka Assembly. The current composition of the assembly is as follows (as of October 23, 2017): The current assembly president is Masahiko Yamashita (Ōsaka Ishin, Yodogawa ward electoral district), the vice president is Naoki Akashi (Kōmeitō, Joto ward).Osaka City Council
President and Vice President
/ref>


External links


Osaka City Government

basic information in English

Osaka City Council
{{in lang, ja
basic information in English
* Wikisource
市制中東京市京都市大阪市ニ特例ヲ設クルノ件
the imperial ordinance of 1889 that barred the city councils of Tokyo, Osaka and Kyoto from electing their mayors and installed the respective (
Home Ministry An interior ministry (sometimes called a ministry of internal affairs or ministry of home affairs) is a government department that is responsible for internal affairs. Lists of current ministries of internal affairs Named "ministry" * Minist ...
appointed) prefectural governors as mayors


References

Politics of Osaka