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Taizō Mikazuki

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(Redirected from Taizo Mikazuki) Japanese politician

Taizo Mikazuki
三日月 大造
Official portrait, 2016
Governor of Shiga Prefecture
Incumbent
Assumed office
20 July 2014
Preceded byYukiko Kada
Member of the House of Representatives
In office
18 December 2012 – 9 May 2014
Preceded byMulti-member district
Succeeded byTatsuo Kawabata
ConstituencyKinki PR
In office
10 November 2003 – 18 December 2012
Preceded byMineichi Iwanaga
Succeeded byNobuhide Takemura
ConstituencyShiga 3rd
Personal details
Born (1971-05-24) 24 May 1971 (age 53)
Ōtsu, Shiga, Japan
Political partyIndependent
Other political
affiliations
Democratic (2003–2014)
Alma materHitotsubashi University

Taizo Mikazuki (三日月 大造, Mikazuki Taizō, born 24 May 1971) is a Japanese politician and the current governor of Shiga Prefecture, having been elected to the position in July 2014. He previously served in the House of Representatives in the Diet (national legislature) as a member of the Democratic Party of Japan.

Career

A native of Otsu, Shiga Prefecture, Mikazuki joined the West Japan Railway Company in 1994 after graduating from Hitotsubashi University's Faculty of Economics. From 1999 he was the chairman of the "young and women employees" committee of both the West Japan Railway Trade Union and Japan Railway Trade Unions Confederation. In 2002 he resigned from JR West to study at the Matsushita Institute of Government and Management.

National Diet

Mikazuki entered the House of Representatives as a member of the Democratic Party of Japan after winning the Shiga No.3 District in the 2003 general election. At the 2005 general election he survived the "hurricane" victory by Junichiro Koizumi's ruling Liberal Democratic Party, retaining his seat by a margin of 266 votes (0.17%) over LDP candidate Osamu Uno.

At the August 2009 election a landslide victory by the Democratic Party brought the party to power under Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama. Mikazuki retained his seat, this time receiving 60.8% of the vote and defeating Uno by more than 49,000 votes. Mikazuki was made a Vice-Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism in Hatoyama's cabinet and was promoted to Senior Vice-Minister when Naoto Kan became Prime Minister in June 2010. He lost his position in the cabinet in a September 2010 shuffle and was instead appointed deputy chairman of the party's national policy committee.

At the 2012 general election that returned the conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) to power, Mikazuki lost his district seat to LDP candidate Nobuhide Takamura but remained in the House by winning one of the Kinki Proportional Representation Block seats. He resigned from the Diet in May 2014 to contest the Shiga gubernatorial election in July. He was replaced in the Diet by DPJ member Tatsuo Kawabata, who had lost his Shiga No.4 District seat in the 2012 election but failed to secure a proportional block seat.

Governor of Shiga Prefecture

2014 Shiga gubernatorial election result by municipality. Blue: majority for Mikazuki, green: Koyari. Koyari carried the cities Ōtsu, Takashima und Nagahama on the Northwestern side of the lake and four of the six towns, but Mikazuki won all cities in the Southeast.

Mikazuki won the Shiga gubernatorial election in July 2014 with 46.3% of the vote, defeating the second-placed Takashi Koyari by 13,000 votes.

References

  1. "Shiga Gov. Taizo Mikazuki defeats Manabu Kondo to win second four-year term". The Japan Times. 24 June 2018. Retrieved 26 July 2023.

External links

Current governors of Japanese prefectures (list)
   

Aichi: Hideaki Ōmura
Akita: Norihisa Satake
Aomori: Sōichirō Miyashita
Chiba: Toshihito Kumagai
Ehime: Tokihiro Nakamura
Fukui: Tatsuji Sugimoto
Fukuoka: Seitaro Hattori
Fukushima: Masao Uchibori
Gifu: Hajime Furuta
Gunma: Ichita Yamamoto
Hiroshima: Hidehiko Yuzaki
Hokkaidō: Naomichi Suzuki

Hyōgo: Motohiko Saitō
Ibaraki: Kazuhiko Ōigawa
Ishikawa: Hiroshi Hase
Iwate: Takuya Tasso
Kagawa: Toyohito Ikeda
Kagoshima: Kōichi Shiota
Kanagawa: Yūji Kuroiwa
Kōchi: Seiji Hamada
Kumamoto: Takashi Kimura
Kyoto: Takatoshi Nishiwaki
Mie: Katsuyuki Ichimi
Miyagi: Yoshihiro Murai

Miyazaki: Shunji Kōno
Nagano: Shuichi Abe
Nagasaki: Kengo Oishi
Nara: Makoto Yamashita
Niigata: Hideyo Hanazumi
Ōita: Kiichiro Satō
Okayama: Ryuta Ibaragi
Okinawa: Denny Tamaki
Osaka: Hirofumi Yoshimura
Saga: Yoshinori Yamaguchi
Saitama: Motohiro Ōno
Shiga: Taizō Mikazuki

Shimane: Tatsuya Maruyama
Shizuoka: Yasutomo Suzuki
Tochigi: Tomikazu Fukuda
Tokushima: Masazumi Gotoda
Tokyo: Yuriko Koike
Tottori: Shinji Hirai
Toyama: Hachiro Nitta
Wakayama: Shūhei Kishimoto
Yamagata: Mieko Yoshimura
Yamaguchi: Tsugumasa Muraoka
Yamanashi: Kotaro Nagasaki


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