, 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, it has served in government as the junior coalition partner of the nationalist and conservative governments led by the
Liberal Democratic Party.
Tetsuo Saito has been the president of the party since 9 November 2024. Komeito currently has 24 elected Deputies in the Japanese
House of Representatives
House of Representatives is the name of legislative bodies in many countries and sub-national entities. In many countries, the House of Representatives is the lower house of a bicameral legislature, with the corresponding upper house often ...
.
History
Opposition before 1993
Komeito began as the Political Federation for Clean Government in 1961, but held its inaugural convention as Komeito on 17 November 1964. The three characters 公明党 have the approximate meanings of "public/government" (公 kō), "light/brightness" (明 mei), and "political party" (党 tō). The combination "kōmei" (公明) is usually taken to mean "justice".
Komeito's predecessor party,
Kōmeitō, was formed in 1962, but it had begun in 1954 as the Kōmei Political League. It lasted until it merged with the NKP in 1998.
In 1957, a group of Young Men's Division members campaigning for a Soka Gakkai candidate in an Osaka Upper House by-election were arrested for distributing money, cigarettes, and caramels at supporters' residences, in violation of election law, and on July 3 of that year, at the beginning of an event memorialized as the "Osaka Incident,"
Daisaku Ikeda was arrested in Osaka. He was taken into custody in his capacity as Soka Gakkai's Youth Division Chief of Staff for overseeing activities that constituted violations of election law. He spent two weeks in jail and appeared in court forty-eight times before he was cleared of all charges in January 1962.
In 1968, fourteen of its members were convicted of forging absentee ballots in Shinjuku, and eight were sentenced to prison for
electoral fraud
Electoral fraud, sometimes referred to as election manipulation, voter fraud, or vote rigging, involves illegal interference with the process of an election, either by increasing the vote share of a favored candidate, depressing the vote share o ...
. In the 1960s it was widely criticized for violating the
separation of church and state
The separation of church and state is a philosophical and Jurisprudence, jurisprudential concept for defining political distance in the relationship between religious organizations and the State (polity), state. Conceptually, the term refers to ...
, and in February 1970 all three major Japanese newspapers printed editorials demanding that the party reorganize. It eventually broke apart based on promises to segregate from Soka Gakkai.
In the 1980s, ''
Shimbun Akahata'' discovered that many Soka Gakkai members were rewarding acquaintances with presents in return for Komeito votes and that
Okinawa residents had changed their addresses to elect Komeito politicians.
Anti-LDP coalition government: 1993–1994
Kōmeitō joined the Hosokawa and Hata anti-LDP coalition cabinets in 1993 and 1994. After the collapse of the anti-LDP and anti-
JCP governments () and the electoral and campaign finance reforms of 1994, the Kōmeitō split in December 1994: The joined the
New Frontier Party (NFP) a few days later in an attempt to unify the splintered opposition. The other group, , continued to exist as a separate party. After the dissolution of the NFP in December 1997, former Kōmeitō members from the NFP founded two new groups: the and the in the House of Councillors, but some ex-Kōmeitō politicians such as Shōzō Azuma followed Ichirō Ozawa into the
Liberal Party. The Reimei Club merged into the New Peace Party a few weeks later in January 1998. Finally, in November 1998, Kōmei and New Peace Party merged to re-establish Kōmeitō (referred to in English now as "New Komeito" – the party's name is just ''Kōmeitō'' as before the 1994 split).
The ''
Japan Echo'' alleged in 1999 that Soka Gakkai distributed fliers to local branches describing how to abuse the ''
jūminhyō'' residence registration system in order to generate a large number of votes for Komeito candidates in specific districts.
Coalition with the Liberal Democratic Party: 1999–2009, 2012–present
The current conservative, more moderate, and centrist party was formed in 1998, in a merger of Kōmei and the New Peace Party. Since then it has joined coalition with the ruling
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which needs Komeito to maintain a majority in the Diet (especially in the House of Councillors which the LDP lost majority since 1989), and did well in the 2000 and 2001 parliamentary elections.
The LDP-Liberal coalition expanded to include the New Komeito Party in October 1999. New Komeito has been (and continues to be) a coalition partner in the Government of Japan since 1999 (excluding 2009–2011 when the Democratic Party of Japan was in power). As such, New Komeito supported a (temporary) change to Japan's "
no-war constitution" in order for Japan to
deploy troops in support of the
2003 invasion of Iraq.
In the
2003 Japanese general election and
2004 Japanese House of Councillors election, the NKP did well, thanks to an extremely committed and well-organized voter base coming from Soka Gakkai. The party shares its support base with the LDP, made up of white-collar bureaucrats and rural populations, but also gained support from religious leaders. However, on 27 July 2005, NKP's Secretary-General said that his party would consider forming a coalition government with the
Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) if the DPJ gained a majority in the House of Representatives. On 8 August 2005, then-
Prime Minister
A prime minister or chief of cabinet is the head of the cabinet and the leader of the ministers in the executive branch of government, often in a parliamentary or semi-presidential system. A prime minister is not the head of state, but r ...
and the president of LDP
Junichiro Koizumi dissolved the
Lower House
A lower house is the lower chamber of a bicameral legislature, where the other chamber is the upper house. Although styled as "below" the upper house, in many legislatures worldwide, the lower house has come to wield more power or otherwise e ...
and called for a general election, due to the rejection on some of the members of LDP for efforts to privatize
Japan Post. The incumbent LDP-New Komeito coalition won a large majority in the
2005 general election.
Natsuo Yamaguchi became the party's leader on 8 September 2009 after the party and their coalition partner LDP suffered a major defeat in the
2009 general election, become part of the opposition for the first time since 1999. New Komeito lost ten seats, including that of party leader
Akihiro Ota and general secretary
Kazuo Kitagawa. On 8 September 2009, Yamaguchi replaced Ota as president of New Komeito.
In the
general election on 16 December 2012, the LDP/Komeito coalition secured a
supermajority and came back into government. The former party chief Akihiro Ota (Ohta) is currently Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism. The party also gained seats in the
general election in 2014. In September 2014 the party changed its English name from New Komeito back to Komeito.
In July 2015, Komeito backed Prime Minister
Shinzō Abe's push to
revise the Constitution in order to "give Japan's military limited powers to fight in foreign conflicts. The principal aims of the bills were to allow Japan's Self-Defense Forces to come to the aid of allied nations under attack (even if Japan itself was not), to expand their scope to support international peacekeeping operations, and to allow for Japan to take on a greater share of security responsibilities as part of the
US-Japan Alliance.
On March 11, 2019, a project team of Komeito submitted proposals to Foreign Minister
Taro Kono for an international agreement to regulate
robotic weapons, calling on Japan to build global consensus for a "political declaration or a code of conduct, within the framework of the
Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons".
Ideology and policies
A self-proclaimed party of "humanitarian socialism", Komeito's declared mission is to pioneer "people-centered politics, a politics based on a
humanitarianism, that treats human life with the utmost respect and care". On 24 April 2019, joint task force efforts with its coalition partner resulted in the passing of a bill mandating reparations and having the coalition government issue a formal apology to sterilization victims of the defunct
Eugenic Protection Act, thus to advance human rights awareness in the wake of lawsuits related to the history of
eugenics in Japan.
Religious scholar and political analyst Masaru Satō explains that in postwar Japan there were two major parties, the
Liberal Democratic Party representing financial interests and large corporations and the
Japan Socialist Party largely advocating the interests of trade unions and the working class. There was no single party that represented people who belonged to neither, such as shop owners and housewives, among others. Komeito was thus able to capture the support of this constituency.
Despite the party's conservative ideology, it supports the protection and expansion of
LGBT rights
Rights affecting lesbian, Gay men, gay, Bisexuality, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) people vary greatly by country or jurisdiction—encompassing everything from the legal recognition of same-sex marriage to the Capital punishmen ...
.
Relationship with ''Soka Gakkai''
Komeito regards the
Soka Gakkai as a "major electoral constituency",
having formally separated from the religious group and revised both its platform and regulations in 1970 to reflect a "secular orientation".
Observers continue to describe Komeito as the Soka Gakkai's "political arm", however, and critics contend the relationship violates the separation of religion and politics enshrined in Article 20 of the
Japanese Constitution.
The leadership and financing of the two groups are currently said to be independent.
Both groups report having occasional liaison meetings, characterizing them as informational and "open to the media".
Numerous Japanese religious groups have established political parties in Japan, but statistics scholar Petter Lindgren states that "None have, however, been more successful than Soka Gakkai."
Domestic policy
Domestically, the party proposals include reduction of the central government and
bureaucracy
Bureaucracy ( ) is a system of organization where laws or regulatory authority are implemented by civil servants or non-elected officials (most of the time). Historically, a bureaucracy was a government administration managed by departments ...
, increased transparency in public affairs, and increased local (
prefectural) autonomy with the
private sector
The private sector is the part of the economy which is owned by private groups, usually as a means of establishment for profit or non profit, rather than being owned by the government.
Employment
The private sector employs most of the workfo ...
playing an increased role. Komeito also supports reducing the consumption tax rate, reducing school fees and offering child allowances.
In accordance with its public affairs transparency platform, it was reported that since September 2016, the Komeito conducted independent analyses for possible environmental contamination of the proposed
Toyosu market site. The Komeito officially raised its environmental concerns later regarding Toyosu market during the 5 October 2016 Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly Session. In response, the newly appointed Tokyo Governor,
Yuriko Koike
Yuriko Koike (小池 百合子, Koike Yuriko; born 15 July 1952) is a Japanese politician who has served as the Governor of Tokyo since 2016. Previously, she was also served as a member of the House of Councillors from 1992 to 1993, a member o ...
, cited possible disciplinary action towards those responsible for the Toyosu project.
Komeito embraces
market liberalism to some extent, but it also emphasizes
social welfare, and officially puts forward "Humanitarian socialism" as its main ideology.
Security policy
In contrast with the LDP, Komeito has generally been more cautious about efforts to expand the Japan Self-Defense Forces (JSDF).
At its founding, the party adhered to absolute pacifism, rejecting both the constitutionality of the JSDF and the military alliance with the US.
Softening its views later, Komeito backed LDP proposals, such as a 2004 vote to dispatch the JSDF to support allied operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, and prime minister
Shinzo Abe's revision of the security laws to expand military powers in July 2015,
although it did manage to moderate the policy on the latter.
Foreign policy
With regard to foreign policy, the Komeito wishes to eliminate
nuclear arms and Japanese involvement in
armed conflict in general. Komeito supports maintaining the
Japan's military alliance with the United States.
The party promotes closer relations between
China and Japan. According to a ''
Foreign Policy
Foreign policy, also known as external policy, is the set of strategies and actions a State (polity), state employs in its interactions with other states, unions, and international entities. It encompasses a wide range of objectives, includ ...
'' article in 2021, "Of all parties in the Diet, Komeito enjoys the strongest and most stable relationship with China."
Komeito's then leader
Yoshikatsu Takeiri's held negotiations Chinese Premier
Zhou Enlai in the 1970s played a critical role in the eventual normalization of relations between the People's Republic of China and Japan in 1972.
The party has advocated for friendlier policies towards China, and has maintained communications with the country even during moments when the relationships between the two countries have been strained.
The party reportedly advocates for improved ties with China and South Korea in light of
Japan's historical war crimes in both territories. In 2013, the party's chief representative Natsuo Yamaguchi praised Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's decision not to visit
Yasukuni Shrine, where Japanese war criminals are enshrined. On the
comfort women issue, in 2016 the party reportedly advocated for removing
Yoshitaka Sakurada
is a former Japanese politician of the Liberal Democratic Party, who served as a member of the House of Representatives in the Diet of Japan. He formerly served as Minister of State for the Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games in the Fourth Abe ...
from a leadership position after Sakurada denied that the women were forced to work.
Party organ
The party organ of Komeito is the ''
Komei Shinbun''. It is published by the Komei Organ Paper Committee, and has also published a regional Hokkaido edition in the past.
Leadership
Current leadership
Leadership as of 9 November 2024:
Election results
House of Representatives
House of Councillors
See also
*
Politics of Japan
Literature
* Ehrhardt, George, Axel Klein, Levi McLaughlin and Steven R. Reed (2014) (Eds.): Kōmeitō – Politics and Religion in Japan. Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley
*
Notes
References
External links
Komeito official websiteKomeito official English website
{{Authority control
1998 establishments in Japan
Buddhism in Japan
Engaged Buddhism
Political parties established in 1998
Political parties in Japan
Politics of Japan
Social conservative parties
Buddhist political parties
Centrist parties in Japan