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Adachi Kenzō : ウィキペディア英語版
Adachi Kenzō

was a statesman, politician and cabinet minister in Taishō and early Shōwa period Japan.
==Biography==
Adachi was the son of a samurai in the service of the Hosokawa clan of Kumamoto Domain. After the Meiji restoration, he studied at the academy founded by Sasaki Tokifusa in Kumamoto. In 1894, during the First Sino-Japanese War he travelled to Korea, initially as a free-lance war correspondent, but soon established two Japanese-language newspapers, the ''Chōsen Jihō'' and the ''Keijō Shimpō''. He was later charged with being one of the central instigators and organizers of the assassination of Korean Empress Myeongseong, along with Miura Gorō. Together with other members of the plot, he was arrested on his return to Japan, but was acquitted by the Japanese courts.〔Federeck. ''Japan Encyclopedia'', page 6〕
In the 1902 General Election, Adachi was elected to the House of Representatives of Japan from the Kumamoto general constituency as a member of the ''Rikken Dōshikai,'' and was re-elected four consecutive times, serving until 25 December 1914, when he became Deputy Foreign Minister under the Okuma Shigenobu administration. He was elected again to the House of Representatives in the 1917 General Election, serving for another eight consecutive terms to 30 April 1942. The ''Rikken Dōshikai'' became the ''Kenseikai'' in 1916, which merged with the ''Seiyu Hontō'' in 1926 to form the ''Rikken Minseitō.'' Adachi was active in organizing these mergers and changes, and consistently promoted a hard-line policy towards China.〔Barshay. ''State and Intellectual in Imperial Japan'', page 197-200〕
Adachi was selected to be Communications Minister under the cabinet of Katō Takaaki in May 1925, continuing under the 1st Wakatsuki administion until April 1927. He then served as Home Minister under the Hamaguchi administration from July 1929, continuing in the same post under the second Wakatsuki administration in December 1931. While as Home Minister, he supported bills granting voting rights to women in local elections, as a first step towards women’s suffrage on a national basis.〔Garon. '' Molding Japanese Minds'', page 137〕
Adachi split with the ''Rikken Minseitō'' in 1931 over disagreements with Prime Minister Wakatsuki’s opposition to the aggressive steps taken by the Imperial Japanese Army in Manchuria and by Wakatsuki’s economic policies, and brought down the Wakatsuki administration by boycotting cabinet meetings after his proposals for a coalition with the rival ''Rikken Seiyukai'' were rejected.〔Metzler, ''The Lever of Empire'', page 239〕 He formed a new political party, the ''Kokumin Dōmei'' in December 1932, together with Nakano Seigō. The new party advocated a form of state socialism or corporatism with government control of strategic industries and financial institutions, and the creation of a Japan-Manchukuo economic union. The party was absorbed into the ''Taisei Yokusankai'' in 1940. However, in 1942, Adachi did not run for re-election, and retired from public life. After the surrender of Japan, he was purged by the American occupation authorities. He died in August 1948 at age 83.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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