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Rikken Minseitō : ウィキペディア英語版
Rikken Minseitō

was one of the main political parties in pre-war Empire of Japan. It was commonly known as the 'Minseitō'.
The ''Minseitō'' was founded on 1 June 1927, by a merger of the ''Kenseikai'' and the ''Seiyu Hontō'' political parties.〔(National Diet Library )〕 Its leadership included Osachi Hamaguchi, Wakatsuki Reijirō, Yamamoto Tatsuo, Takejirō Tokonami, Adachi Kenzō, Koizumi Matajirō and Saitō Takao. The party platform was politically and economically more liberal than its major rival, the ''Rikken Seiyūkai,'' calling for rule by the Diet of Japan rather than bureaucrats or ''genrō,'' elimination of disparities in wealth, international cooperation, and protection of personal liberties.〔Garon. The State and Labor in Modern Japan Page 137〕 Its main base of support was the urban middle class, but its principal financial backing was the Mitsubishi ''zaibatsu.''
The ''Minseitō'' fielded many candidates in the February 1928 General Election, (the first to be held after the General Election Law), winning 217 seats in the Lower House, as opposed to 218 seats for the ''Seiyūkai''. This resulted in a hung parliament.
In the following 1930 General Election, the ''Minseitō'' took 273 seats, as opposed to 174 seats for the ''Seiyūkai'', which gave it an absolute majority. ''Minseitō'' president Osachi Hamaguchi, Herbert Bix referred to him as Hamaguchi Yūkō,〔Herbert P. Bix, Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan (New York, NY: HarperCollins, 2000), 208〕 became Prime Minister. Hamaguchi’s first priority was to address the effects of the 1929 Stock Market Crash through retrenchment of government spending, tightening the money supply and encouraging exports while stabilizing foreign investments through returning to a fixed exchange rate.〔Gordon. A Modern History of Japan: From Tokugawa Times to the Present〕
During its tenure, the ''Minseitō'' also advocated a conciliatory foreign policy, and ratified the London Naval Agreement of 1930. However, Hamaguchi fell victim to an assassination attempt on 14 November 1930 when he was shot in Tokyo Station by a member of an ultranationalist secret society. Wakatsuki Reijirō became acting Prime Minister, also from the Minseitō.
In 1931, ''Minseitō'' strongly opposed the Mukden Incident which was engineered by the Imperial Japanese Army.〔Young, Japan's Total Empire page 121〕 The anti-war Foreign Minister Kijūrō Shidehara and Prime Minister Reijirō came under strong criticism for their intervention in military affairs, and were accused of "serious corruption", and his government collapsed in 1931.
In the following 1932 General Election, some right-wing members defected to the ''Rikken Seiyūkai'', which won an absolute majority of 301 seats. ''Seiyūkai'' president Inukai Tsuyoshi became prime minister.
The ''Minseitō'' was able to recover a very slight majority of 205 seats versus 175 seats for the ''Seiyūkai'' in the 1936 General Election only by adopting a more pro-military stance. However, the narrow margin again resulted in a hung parliament. The ''Minseitō'' dropped back down to 179 seats in the 1937 General Election, while the ''Seiyūkai'' retained all of its 175 seats, which continued the paralysis in the Diet of Japan.
On 15 August 1940 the ''Minseitō'' voted to dissolve itself into the Imperial Rule Assistance Association as part of Fumimaro Konoe's efforts to create a single-party state, and thereafter ceased to exist.
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抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Rikken Minseitō」の詳細全文を読む



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