Political Parties of Japan
By Michael Roberto, published Feb 24, 2006
Published Content: 10 Total Views: 19,198 Favorited By: 0 CPs
Attempts at forming a Socialist and a Communist Party would be legally banned or suppressed by authorities. Socialist parties that were able to form were also forced to dissolve in 1940 and enter the officially sponsored Imperial Rule Assistance Association. After the end of World War II, the Communist Party was revived its few remaining members that had been just released from prison or retuned from exile. The Social Mass Party was also resurrected as the Socialist Party, with it receiving 26% of the popular vote in 1947. The party would split between 1951 and 1955, and then again in 1960, resulting in moderates forming the Democratic Socialist Party. Only the Komeito, founded by the Soka Gakkai religious group in 1964, served purely as a postwar faction.
The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), or Jiminto, possessed a strong rural background. Local politics dominated the political scene, with many local politicians running as independents. The smaller and more rural an electorate was the greater, the greater chance of an independent candidate. This enabled candidates to pull in a much broader variety of votes due to a lack of a centralized platform. Thus, most Japanese voters declared themselves independent.
You may also like...
- Japan and American Policy After World War II
- Social, Economic and Political Problems in the Republic of Korea
- Post-War Japan and Reformism
- Exiled Ex-Prime Minister of Thailand Thaksin Shinawatra - Will He Stay Exiled for Long?
- Former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto
- U.K. Prime Minister Announces Troop Decrease
- Barham Salih, Deputy Prime Minister of Iraq, Visits Al Mutanabi Street
- Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Faults United Nations for Corruption
- Jeremy Clarkson Prime Minister Petition:
- PINR Profiles the Future Under Japan's New Prime Minister
Takeaways
- Commoners were to be without any form of a political role.
- Samurai served as the lords of commoners without objection.
- Attempts at forming a Socialist and a Communist Party were legally banned by author.
Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Most Commented On

