Misplaced Pages

Kokumin Kyōkai

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Japanese political party
This article is part of a series on
Politics of Japan
Constitution and Laws
The Monarchy

Naruhito

Fumihito


Executive

Shigeru Ishiba (LDP)

Second Ishiba Cabinet
(LDPKomeito coalition)


Legislature


Fukushiro Nukaga

  • Vice Speaker

Kōichirō Genba


Masakazu Sekiguchi

  • Vice President

Hiroyuki Nagahama


Judiciary

Saburo Tokura


Bank of Japan
  • Governor

Kazuo Ueda


Elections


Japanese general elections


Japanese House of Councillors elections


Unified local elections
Administrative divisions
Foreign relations





flag Japan portal

The Kokumin Kyōkai (Japanese: 国民協会, lit. National Association) was a political party in Japan.

History

Led by Saigō Jūdō and Shinagawa Yajirō, nationalist supporters of Matsukata Masayoshi and his government established the Kokumin Kyōkai in June 1892. The party supported the expansion of the military and industrialisation, and by early 1893 it had 68 members in the National Diet. It was less supportive of the Itō Hirobumi government installed in August 1892, and gradually became an opposition party.

The party won 35 seats in the National Diet during the March 1894 elections, but was reduced to 32 in the September 1894 elections. By 1897 defections saw it down to 23 representatives, and although it won 29 seats in the March 1898 elections, it only won 21 seats in the September 1898 elections. It was subsequently dissolved in 1899 and succeeded by the Teikokutō.

Election results

Election Leader Seats +/- Status
March 1894 Shinagawa Yajirō 35 / 300 new Opposition
September 1894 32 / 300 Decrease 3 Opposition
March 1898 29 / 300 Decrease 3 Opposition
August 1898 21 / 300 Decrease 8 Opposition

References

  1. ^ Haruhiro Fukui (1985) Political parties of Asia and the Pacific, Greenwood Press, pp575–576
Japan Political parties of the Empire of Japan by decade of establishment
1870s
1880s
1890s
1900s
1910s
1920s
1930s
1940s
Categories: