Elections in Japan?

Google

Did you mean | Travel | Economics | Finance | Marketing | Business | Culture | Geography | History | Life | Mathematics | Science | Society | Technology | New site added |

Add a link on the top of this Elections in Japan page Express submission by secure payment !




Politics of Japan







Politics Portal
Politics by country
Elections by country
Parties by country

The Japanese political system has three types of elections: general elections to the House of Representatives held every four years (unless the lower house is dissolved earlier), elections to the House of Councillors held every three years to choose one-half of its members, and local elections held every four years for offices in prefectures, cities, and villages. Elections are supervised by election committees at each administrative level under the general direction of the Central Election Administration Committee. The minimum voting age for persons of both sexes is twenty years; voters must satisfy a three-month residency requirement before being allowed to cast a ballot. For those seeking office, there are two sets of age requirements: twenty-five years of age for admission to the House of Representatives and most local offices, and thirty years of age for admission to the House of Councillors and the prefectural governorship.

Have to see

Contents

Italian FriendFinder - Italian Personals
FriendFinder - Traditional Personals
Asia FriendFinder - Chinese Personals
Filipino FriendFinder - Filipino Personals
OutPersonals - Gay Sex Personals
Gay FriendFinder - Gay Dating Personals
ALT.com - Fetish AND1 BDSM Personals
Korean FriendFinder - Korean Personals
Senior FriendFinder - 40+ Personals
German FriendFinder - German Personals
BigChurch - Christian/Catholic Personals
Indian FriendFinder - Indian Personals
French FriendFinder - French Personals
Jewish FriendFinder - Jewish Personals
Amigos.com - Spanish/Portuguese Personals
Adult FriendFinder - Sex Personals

National elections

The Diet (Kokkai) has two chambers. The House of Representatives (Shugi-in) has 480 members, elected for a four year term, 300 members in single-seat constituencies and 180 members by proportional representation in 11 block districts. In this system, each voter votes twice, once for a candidate in the local constituency, and once for a party, each of which has a list of candidates for each block district. The local constituencies are decided by plurality, and the block seats are then handed out to the parties proportionally (by the D'Hondt method) to their share of the vote, who then appoint members from their lists. Often the parties assign the block seats to unsuccessful single-seat candidates.

The House of Councillors (Sangi-in) has 247 members, elected for a six year term, 149 members in multi-seat constituencies and 98 by proportional representation. Half of the House of Councillors comes up for election every three years.

For many years Japan was a one party dominant state, but in 1993 the dominant Liberal Democratic Party was defeated by a coalition government. They soon regained power. Due to the proportional voting system it is unlikely that Japan will develop an exclusive two-party system, but there is speculation that Japanese political diversity is declining.

2005 General election


Summary of the election results Local seats +/- Block seats +/- Block votes % +/- Total seats +/-
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) Jiyu Minshu-to 219 +51 77 +8 25,887,798 38.2% +3.3 296 +60
Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) Minshuto' 52 -53 61 -11 21,036,425 31.0% -6.4 113 -64
New Komeito (New Clean Government Party) Komeito 8 -1 23 -2 8,987,620 13.3% -1.5 31 -3
Japanese Communist Party (JCP) Nihon Kyosan-to 0 0 9 0 4,919,187 7.3% -0.4 9 0
Social Democratic Party (SDP) Shakai Minshuto 1 0 6 +1 3,719,522 5.5% +0.3 7 +1
People's New Party (PNP) Kokumin Shinto) 2 2 1,183,073 1.7% 4
New Party Nippon (NPN) Shinto Nippon 0 1 1,643,506 2.4% 1
New Party Daichi (NPD) Shinto Daichi 0 1 433,938 0.6% 1
Others 18 +1 - 18 +1
Total (turnout %) 300 180 67,781,069 100.0 480

Previous results


Pre-reform electoral districts

In the 1980s, apportionment of electoral districts still reflected the distribution of the population in the years following World War II, when only one-third of the people lived in urban areas and twothirds lived in rural areas. In the next forty-five years, the population became more than three-quarters urban, as people deserted rural communities to seek economic opportunities in Tokyo and other large cities. The lack of reapportionment led to a serious underrepresentation of urban voters. Urban districts in the House of Representatives were increased by five in 1964, bringing nineteen new representatives to the lower house; in 1975 six more urban districts were established, with a total of twenty new representatives allocated to them and to other urban districts. Yet great inequities remained between urban and rural voters.

In the early 1980s, as many as five times the votes were needed to elect a representative from an urban district compared with those needed for a rural district. Similar disparities existed in the prefectural constituencies of the House of Councillors. The Supreme Court had ruled on several occasions that the imbalance violated the constitutional principle of one person-one vote. The Supreme Court mandated the addition of eight representatives to urban districts and the removal of seven from rural districts in 1986. Several lower house districts' boundaries were redrawn. Yet the disparity is still as much as three urban votes to one rural vote.

After the 1986 change, the average number of persons per lower house representative was 236,424. However, the figure varied from 427,761 persons per representative in the fourth district of Kanagawa Prefecture, which contains the large city of Yokohama, to 142,932 persons in the third district of largely rural and mountainous Nagano Prefecture.

The greatest success of the 1993 reform government under Hosokawa Morihiro was a change in the system, that split the House of Representative seats into a 250-seat proportional representation block and 250 single-candidate districts.

Prefectural and local elections

See also

External links

What does Elections in Japan mean ? Search with Google !

Google

Article on Elections in Japan, category, different spelling or sense



Did you mean: Culture | Geography | History | Life | Mathematics | Science | Society | Technology
Economy finance business money economy: Economics | Finance | Marketing | Business | Money | Real Estate | Insurance | Retirement | Microeconomics | Economics

Top Search: Kazaa | Sex | Pornography | Games | MySpace | Google | Ebay | Paris Hilton | Carmen Electra | Jessica Simpson | Eminem | MapQuest | Dogs | Jokes | Obituaries | MSN Messenger | Splogs | Ringtones | Casino | Poker | Gambling | Lyrics | Anime |

Continents and countries in the world: Japan | United Kingdom | Canada | France | Amsterdam | Monaco | Spain | Capitals Cities | Continents | World | Americas | North America | South America | Europe | Africa | Eurasia | Oceania | Antarctica | Asia | Australia


A web travel guide for your holidays, hotel and plane tickets: Travel guide and holidays
French Version, guide de voyage dans le monde: Voyage et vacances
Visit partners of Did you mean Travel: Partners
Site Map articles begining from 0 to 9 and A to Z: Site Map 0 to A | Site Map B to C | Site Map D to Z

Cours d'anglais, cours de langues pour debutant: Cours d'anglais
Annuaire france regions et tourisme: Annuaire OuiX
Sexe sur AbSexe, videos porno et annuaire sexe: Ab Sexe

Url Rewriting by Atuvu Referencement

This work is licensed under a GNU Free Documentation License.
Texts derived from WikiPedia Elections in Japan
©2006 Did you mean Copyright Notice

Page Elections in Japan cached on Friday 29th of August 2008 06:33:08 PM