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1989 Japanese House of Councillors election

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FieldValue
election_name1989 Japanese House of Councillors election
countryJapan
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_election1986 Japanese House of Councillors election
previous_year1986
next_election1992 Japanese House of Councillors election
next_year1992
seats_for_election126 of the 252 seats in the House of Councillors
majority_seats127
image_size150x150px
election_date23 July 1989
1blankConstituency vote
2blank% and swing
3blankNational vote
4blank% and swing
turnout65.01% (6.31pp)
image1Sosuke Uno 1977.png
leader1Sōsuke Uno
party1Liberal Democratic Party (Japan)
last_election1140 seats
seats136
seats_after1**109**
seat_change131
1data1**17,466,406**
2data1**30.70%** (14.37pp)
3data115,343,455
4data127.32% (11.26pp)
image2Takako Doi 19910417.jpg
leader2Takako Doi
party2Japan Socialist Party
last_election241 seats
seats2**46**
seats_after266
seat_change225
1data215,009,451
2data226.38% (4.87pp)
3data2**19,688,252**
4data2**35.05%** (17.85pp)
image3Kōshirō Ishida Hosokawa Cabinet 19930809 kaidan2.jpg
leader3Koshiro Ishida
party3Kōmeitō (1962–1998)
last_election324 seats
seats310
seats_after320
seat_change34
1data32,900,947
2data35.10% (0.70pp)
3data36,097,971
4data310.86% (2.11pp)
image4Kenji Miyamoto (cropped).jpg
leader4Kenji Miyamoto
party4Japanese Communist Party
last_election416 seats
seats45
seats_after414
seat_change42
1data45,012,424
2data48.81% (2.61pp)
3data43,954,408
4data47.04% (2.43pp)
party5Rengo no Kai
color5FF0000
last_election5*Did not exist*
seats511
seats_after512
seat_change5*New*
1data53,878,783
2data56.82% (*New*)
3data5
image6Eiichi Nagasue 197102.jpg
leader6Eiichi Nagasue
party6Democratic Socialist Party (Japan)
last_election612 seats, 6.9%
seats63
seats_after68
seat_change64
1data62,066,533
2data63.63% (0.93pp)
3data62,726,419
4data64.85% (2.02pp)
map_image[[File:1989 Japanese House of Councillors election - Map.svg350px]]
map_captionResults of the election, showing the winning candidates in each prefecture and the national PR block.
titlePresident of the House
of Councillors
before_electionYoshihiro Tsuchiya
before_partyLiberal Democratic Party (Japan)
after_electionYoshihiro Tsuchiya
after_partyLiberal Democratic Party (Japan)

of Councillors](list-of-speakers-of-the-house-of-councillors-japan) House of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 23 July 1989.

There were several controversial issues dominating the pre-election atmosphere, all of which reflected negatively on the ruling LDP. The most important, according to most polls, was the introduction of an unpopular 3% consumption tax law which had been forced through the Diet by Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita despite boycotts by the opposition parties, an act which hurt the LDP's image with the public. A second issue was the infamous Recruit scandal, which induced the resignation of Takeshita and his cabinet members and left a major stain on the LDP's integrity to the public. There was also resistance to the LDP's gradual adoption of import liberalisation of food products, which lost the party their traditional rural voters resentful of farm imports. Even more, there was incumbent Prime Minister Sōsuke Uno's sex scandal which had come to light only a month earlier.

The result of all of this negative feeling towards the LDP was an unprecedented victory for the Japan Socialist Party (JSP), roughly doubling its share of the popular vote when compared to the previous House of Councillors elections, and being the only major pre-existing party to see a net increase in its share of the popular vote; the other opposition parties, which had more success in the past while the JSP stagnated, saw net decreases in both popular votes as well as seat numbers. Moreover, although the Japanese Communist Party has historically contributed to vote splitting by fielding candidates in every district, the overall decline in support for the JCP is thought to have helped jointly-backed opposition candidates in this election. In any event, the JSP would cooperate with the other opposition parties in order to form a majority coalition over a minority LDP, a historical first for the House of Councillors.

Meanwhile, the LDP lost the popular vote in an election for the first time in its history, and the only one-seat districts won by the LDP were Toyama, Shiga, and Wakayama. The LDP's losses were strongest in single-member constituencies, but less strongly felt in multi-member constituencies, no doubt partly due to the above-mentioned relative lack of vote splitting in this election. After this election, the LDP designated as its new leader Toshiki Kaifu, who belonged to the same historical faction as Takeo Miki, and who, like Miki, was reform-minded; ironically, Kaifu later defected from the LDP in the mid-1990s in order to join the opposition, although he eventually returned to the LDP in the 21st century.

Results

after|seattype4=+/–

By constituency

ConstituencyTotal
seatsSeats wonJSPLDPRengoKōmeitōJCPDSPTAPDCSPPOthersInd.Japan Socialist Party}};"Liberal Democratic Party (Japan)}};"Democratic Reform Party (Japan)}};"Kōmeitō (1962–1998)}};"Japanese Communist Party}};"Democratic Socialist Party (Japan)}};"Dainiin Club}};"Sports and Peace Party}};"Independent}};"Aichi3Akita1Aomori1Chiba2Ehime1Fukui1Fukuoka3Fukushima2Gifu1Gunma2Hiroshima2Hokkaido4Hyōgo3Ibaraki2Ishikawa1Iwate1Kagawa1Kagoshima2Kanagawa2Kōchi1Kumamoto2Kyoto2Mie1Miyagi1Miyazaki1Nagano2Nagasaki1Nara1Niigata2Ōita1Okinawa1Okayama2Osaka3Saga1Saitama2Shiga1Shimane1Shizuoka2Tochigi2Tokushima1Tokyo4Tottori1Toyama1Wakayama1Yamagata1Yamaguchi1Yamanashi1National50Total1264636111053211110
111
1
1
11
1
1
111
11
1
11
11
1111
111
11
1
1
1
11
11
1
2
11
1
1
1
11
1
1
11
1
1
11
111
1
11
1
1
11
11
1
1111
1
1
1
1
1
1
2015642111

References

References

  1. Smith, Charles. (10 August 1989). "Life after harakiri".
  2. Baerwald, Hans H.. (1989). "Japan's House of Councillors Election: A Mini-Revolution?". Asian Survey.
  3. [http://www.stat.go.jp/data/chouki/zuhyou/27-13.xls Table 13: Persons Elected and Votes Polled by Political Parties - Ordinary Elections for the House of Councillors (1947–2004)] {{Webarchive. link. (2011-03-23 [[Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications]])
  4. "27-11 Allotted Number, Candidates, Eligible Voters as of Election Day, Voters and Voting Percentages of Ordinary Elections for the House of Councillors (1947-2004)".
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