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Shinshinto : ウィキペディア英語版
New Frontier Party (Japan)

The was a political party in Japan that existed during the mid-1990s. As a merger of several small parties, the party was ideologically diverse (), with its membership ranging from moderate social democrats to neoliberals and conservatives. It is now defunct.
The party was founded on 10 December 1994 by former member parties of the anti-Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) coalition led by Morihiro Hosokawa who had resigned in April. During the formation of the succeeding Hata cabinet, several coalition parties formed a joint parliamentary group. But at the same time, the Japanese Socialist Party (JSP) and the New Party Sakigake withdrew from the eight-party coalition and left Hata without majority. In June, the LDP returned to power by striking a "grand" coalition deal with the JSP under which the Socialists would receive the prime ministership. Hata resigned before an impending no-confidence vote submitted by the LDP: In less than a year, the anti-LDP coalition had broken down. After the electoral reform initiated by the anti-LDP coalition had been passed by the new LDP-JSP coalition in November 1994, the opposition parties negotiated on creating a unified force to contest the newly introduced First-past-the-post voting single-member electoral districts that now elect the majority of the House of Representatives: In December, the Japan Renewal Party, a part of Kōmeitō which had split a few days before, the Democratic Socialist Party (DSP), the Japan New Party and the ''Jiyū Kaikaku Rengō'' ("Liberal Reform League" a federation of several small groups of Diet members who had broken away from the LDP) formed the New Frontier Party.
On 8 December 1994, the Diet members of the future party elected former LDP Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu as leader, Kaifu received 131 votes, former Prime Minister Tsutomu Hata 52 and DSP leader Takashi Yonezawa 32 votes. In 1995, Kaifu was succeeded by Ichirō Ozawa who led the party from 1995 until its dissolution in 1997. Ozawa won the leadership election among party members and registered supporters (''tōyū'') in December 1995 with 1,120,012 votes against Tsutomu Hata who received 566,998 votes.〔Los Angeles Times, December 28, 1995: (Veteran Kingmaker to Lead Japan's Opposition : Politics: Ichiro Ozawa defeats rival 2 to 1 in nationwide New Frontier Party primary. Victory makes him top contender for next prime minister )〕 Ozawa was reelected just a few days before the party dissolved in a vote among NFP Diet members and delegates from NFP prefectural federations in December 1997, defeating Michihiko Kano by 230 votes to 182.〔The Japan Times, December 18, 1997: (Ozawa wins re-election as Shinshinto president )〕
In terms of policy, the New Frontier Party took a hawkish position on foreign, security policy and related constitutional matters (which had been the main dividing line between political left and right in the 1955 System) similar to the LDP, but pushed for more deregulation, decentralization and political reform. It thereby tried to attract disgruntled LDP voters who would seek for new answers to the political challenges posed in the wake of the burst bubble economy and by the dawning demographic transition. In contrast, the Democratic Party that was formed two years later to provide an alternative to the old LDP and the Ozawa-dominated NFP, took a similar stance to the NFP on economic reform, but a more dovish position on foreign policy, thereby also becoming appealing to traditional JSP voters.〔Leonard J. Schoppa (2011). ''The Evolution of Japan's Party System: Politics and Policy in an Era of Institutional Change.'' University of Toronto Press. Chapter 2, pp. 14–42: Path Dependence in the Evolution of Japan's Party System since 1993.〕
==Aftermath, 1997==
After the New Frontier Party dissolved, its remnants collated into several small parties:〔Tun-Jen Cheng, Deborah A. Brown ''Religious Organizations And Democratization: Case Studies'' 2006 Page 279 "The demise of the Shinshinto into a variety of new splinter parties, including a revived Komeito (now called "New Komeito"), and increasing public dissatisfaction with the LDP-created political chaos. This situation was compounded by the ..."〕
* The New Peace Party (''Shintō Heiwa'') and the "Dawn Club" (''Reimei Club'') of former Kōmeitō members, these merged later in 1998 with the still existing Kōmei to re-establish the ("New") Kōmeitō,
* the Liberal Party of Ichirō Ozawa which later participated in a coalition with the LDP under Keizō Obuchi, but eventually merged into the Democratic Party in 2003,
* the Reform Club (''Kaikaku Club'') of Tatsuo Ozawa that later joined the LDP-Liberal Party-Kōmeitō coalition,
* the New Fraternity Party (''Shintō Yūai'') of Kansei Nakano and
* the "Voice of the People" (''Kokumin no Koe'') of Michihiko Kano.
The latter two parties immediately joined the Democratic Party in one parliamentary group (then renamed 民主友愛太陽国民連合, ''Minshu Yūai Taiyō Kokumin Rengō'', "Democratic Fraternity Sun People's League", abbreviated as 民友連, ''Min'yūren''). They were joined by two parties who had broken away from the NFP earlier – the Sun Party of Tsutomu Hata in 1996 and the From Five of Morihiro Hosokawa in 1997 – and another party from the former anti-LDP coalition that hadn't joined the NFP: the ''Minshu Kaikaku Rengō'' ("Democratic Reform League"). The joint parliamentary group gave the DPJ the role of leading the opposition in the Diet. Three member parties together formed the Minseitō ("Democratic" or "Good Governance Party") a few weeks later. All member parties of the parliamentary group eventually merged with the Democratic Party to form the ("New") Democratic Party in April 1998.〔The Japan Times, March 8, 1998: (Hosokawa backs merger under DPJ )〕〔The Japan Times, March 16, 1998: (Minyuren panel works to write up new DPJ's platform )〕〔The Japan Times, April 7, 1998: (Executive leaders of new DPJ chosen )〕

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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