2015 Hyōgo Prefectural Election
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The was an election for the
Hyogo Prefectural Assembly The is the prefectural parliament of Hyōgo Prefecture. The assembly's 87 members are elected every four years in 40 districts by single non-transferable vote. Nine of the electoral districts correspond with the wards of Kobe city and the rema ...
held on 12 April 2015 as part of the 2015 unified local elections in Japan. The election saw the number of assembly members reduced from 89 to 87 and the number of electoral districts reduced from 41 to 40. Voting was held in 23 districts and representatives for the remaining 17 districts (including the two-member district of Tatsuno-Ibo) were elected unopposed. The election was held in the wake of the political expenses scandal that was exposed in July 2014 involving multiple assembly members and was notable for former assemblyman Ryutaro Nonomura's outburst of uncontrolled sobbing at a news conference. The election saw the
Liberal Democratic Party Several political parties from around the world have been called the Liberal Democratic Party, Democratic Liberal Party or Liberal Democrats. These parties have usually followed liberalism as ideology, although they can vary widely from very progr ...
(LDP) maintain their position as the largest group in the assembly with a total of 40 seats (official candidates plus independents endorsed by the party), although the party was unable to secure the 44 seats required for an outright majority. Of the other major parties, the
Democratic Party of Japan The was a Centrism, centristThe Democratic Party of Japan was widely described as centrist: * * * * * * * to Centre-left politics, centre-left, Liberalism, liberal or Social liberalism, social-liberal List of political parties in Japan, ...
(DPJ) was reduced from 16 seats to 11, while
Komeito , formerly New Komeito (NKP) and commonly referred to as simply Komei, is a political party in Japan founded by the leader of Soka Gakkai, Daisaku Ikeda, in 1964. It is generally considered centrist and socially conservative. Since 2012, i ...
had all 13 of their candidates elected. The
Japan Innovation Party The is a conservative and centre-right to right-wing populist political party in Japan. Formed as Initiatives from Osaka in October 2015 from a split in the old Japan Innovation Party, the party became the third-biggest opposition party in ...
, which was contesting the unified local elections for the first time, won nine seats. Voter turnout was 40.55%, a reduction of 0.88% compared to the 2011 election. Following the election, the LDP's Noriyuki Ishikawa and Ryosuke Ueda were elected speaker and vice-speaker of the assembly.


Candidates

129 candidates nominated for the 87 seats in the assembly, six less than the 135 candidates who contested 89 seats in the 2011 election and the lowest number in seventy years. Amongst the candidates were 73 current members and 4 former members seeking re-election. The LDP was the only party to nominate a candidate in each of the 40 districts, however their total of 46 candidates (including official candidates and endorsed independents) made it difficult to secure the 44 seats required for an outright majority in the assembly. The DPJ fielded a total of 18 candidates, considerably less than the 32 candidates fielded at the 2011 election. Komeito fielded 13 candidates (including one endorsed independent), 11 of whom were sitting members. The candidates also included 26 women, the highest number on record.


Results

The LDP maintained their position as the largest party in the assembly, winning 40 seats including 17 uncontested. However they lost the slim majority that they had held since the resignation of two independents in December 2014. The DPJ lost six seats and were reduced to 11 members; they also lost their position as second largest party in the assembly to Komeito, who had all of their 13 candidates elected. The Innovation Party, contesting their first general election at the prefectural level, gained 7 seats to become the fourth-largest party in the assembly. The oldest candidate in the election, 83-year old LDP candidate and former speaker of the assembly Kenzo Kamatani, finished third in the four-member Kakogawa district, thereby winning his seventh 4-year term in the assembly. Former vice-speaker Toyohiko Himura was elected unopposed to his eighth term in the assembly in the Toyooka district. LDP member for the Himeji district Hideo Iwatani was unsuccessful in seeking a ninth term.


Retiring members

Fourteen sitting members did not seek re-election, including two that resigned to contest mayoral elections that were held on 26 April 2015: * Kazuo Enomoto - Akashi district, LDP, 1 term (lost Akashi mayoral election) * Satohiro Fujii - Kita district, DPJ, 4 terms * Hirokazu Goda - Itami district, Komeito, 4 terms * Takeshi Goto () - Himeji district, LDP, 7 terms * Norimoto Ishido - Sayō district (abolished at election), LDP, 4 terms * Tadao Kajitani - Kita district, LDP, 4 terms * Sumie Kakemizu - Nishinomiya district, DPJ, 6 terms * Ippo Kiritsuki - Tarumi district, LDP, 1 term *
Minoru Kitano Minoru is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include: *, Japanese former president of Nintendo of America *, Japanese actor *, Japanese professional wrestler *, Japanese naval general *, Japanese footballer *, Japanese ...
- Himeji district, LDP, 2 terms (lost Himeji mayoral election) * Masahiko Nagatomi - Kako district, DPJ, 4 terms * Tsuyoshi Oda - Kasai district, LDP, 4 terms * Yukio Ono - Himeji district, Komeito, 5 terms * Chisato Sugimoto - Himeji district, JCP, 3 terms * Yukio Tateishi - Hyogo district, LDP, 8 terms


Defeated members

The following sitting members were defeated in the election: *
Kotaro Ikehata Kotaro, Kōtarō or Koutarou (written: , , , , , , , , , , or in katakana) is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include: *, Japanese baseball player *, Japanese scientist and inventor *, Japanese photography critic an ...
- Takarazuka district, independent, 2 terms * Hideyuki Inoue - Kakogawa district, LDP, 3 terms * Shuzo Ishihara - Nishi district, independent, 5 terms * Hideo Iwatani - Himeji district, LDP, 8 terms * Shinobu Kamo - Kawanishi-Kawabe district, LDP, 5 terms * Minoru Kishiguchi - Akashi district, DPJ, 3 terms * Shizunori Miyata - Amagasaki district, JCP, 4 terms (defeated by fellow JCP candidate Etsuko Shomoto) * Eiichi Nakata - Sanda district, independent (reform group), 1 term * Takahiro Otsuka - Suma district, independent (DPJ endorsed), 2 terms * Chie Yamamoto - Itami district, DPJ, 1 term


Returning members

The following candidates were returned after having previously served in the assembly : * Hiroto Kitaguchi (Akashi district, independent, 2nd term): Was previously elected to the assembly in 1999; subsequently served two terms as mayor of Akashi from 2003 to 2011. * Haruyo Omae (Nishinomiya district, independent, 3rd term): resigned from the assembly in December 2014 to contest the national general election held in the same month, was unsuccessful as an independent candidate in the Hyogo 7th district. * Yuichiro Wada (Tarumi district, independent, 4th term): resigned from the assembly in December 2014 to contest the general election, was unsuccessful as a
Party for Future Generations The , officially the , was a Japanese political party. It was formed as the on 1 August 2014 by a group of Diet members led by Shintarō Ishihara. The party adopted its final name in December 2015, and ended up dissolving in November 2018. His ...
candidate in the Hyogo 3rd district.


References

{{Japanese prefectural assembly elections 2015 elections in Japan Prefectural assembly elections in Japan April 2015 in Japan Elections in Hyōgo Prefecture