1946 Japanese general election

General elections were held in Japan on 10 April 1946, the first after World War II, during the Allied occupation. Voters had one, two or three votes, depending on how many MPs were elected from their constituency. The result was a victory for the Liberal Party, which won 141 of the 468 seats.[1] Voter turnout was 72.1 percent.

1946 Japanese general election

← 194210 April 19461947 →

All 468 seats in the House of Representatives
235 seats needed for a majority
Turnout72.08%
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
LeaderIchirō HatoyamaChūji MachidaTetsu Katayama
PartyLiberalProgressiveSocialist
Seats won1419493
Popular vote13,505,74610,350,5309,924,930
Percentage24.36%18.67%17.90%

 Fourth partyFifth party
 
LeaderKyuichi TokudaSanehiko Yamamoto
PartyCommunistCooperative
Seats won514
Popular vote2,135,7571,799,764
Percentage3.85%3.25%


Prime Minister before election

Kijūrō Shidehara
Independent

Prime Minister after election

Shigeru Yoshida
Liberal

Background edit

Prime Minister Kijūrō Shidehara, who had been appointed by the Emperor Hirohito in October 1945, dissolved the House of Representatives in December 1945. Shidehara had been working with Allied occupation commander Douglas MacArthur to implement a new constitution and other political reforms.

In the months following the war, the Imperial Rule Assistance Association caucus broke up and three major political parties emerged in the Diet, loosely based around the major parties that stood in the 1937 election prior to the war. The Liberal Party was mainly composed of former Rikken Seiyūkai members[citation needed], while the Progressive Party was mainly composed of former Rikken Minseitō members[citation needed] and the Socialist Party was mainly composed of former Shakai Taishūtō members[citation needed].

This was the first time Japanese women were allowed to vote. 39 women were elected to office, the largest number elected until the 2005 elections. On the other hand, Taiwanese and Koreans in Japan had their rights to vote and to run for office suspended.

Following the election, there was a brief attempt to keep the Shidehara cabinet alive by having Shidehara join the Progressive Party, which the other major parties opposed. The Liberals and Progressives agreed to form a government under Liberal leader Ichiro Hatoyama on 2 May, but Hatoyama was promptly purged on 4 May and a new government formed under Foreign Minister Shigeru Yoshida, who officially became Prime Minister on 22 May.

Results edit

PartyVotes%Seats
Liberal Party13,505,74624.36141
Japan Progressive Party10,350,53018.6794
Japan Socialist Party9,924,93017.9093
Japanese Communist Party2,135,7573.855
Japan Cooperative Party1,799,7643.2514
Other parties6,488,03211.7038
Independents11,244,12020.2881
Vacant2
Total55,448,879100.00468
Valid votes26,100,17598.19
Invalid/blank votes482,0001.81
Total votes26,582,175100.00
Registered voters/turnout36,878,41772.08
Source: Oscarsson, Nohlen et al.

By prefecture edit

PrefectureTotal
seats
Seats won
LiberalProgressiveSocialistCommunistCooperativeOthersInd.Vacant
Aichi1845324
Akita811321
Aomori72311
Chiba1362113
Ehime92421
Fukui51121
Fukuoka182583
Fukushima13472
Gifu105212
Gunma101531
Hiroshima1231323
Hokkaido23641732
Hyōgo1857411
Ibaraki134513
Ishikawa6312
Iwate8422
Kagawa6321
Kagoshima11121232
Kanagawa126411
Kōchi5212
Kumamoto104213
Kyoto103133
Mie914112
Miyagi931131
Miyazaki642
Nagano142131115
Nagasaki85111
Nara51112
Niigata155541
Ōita72221
Okayama103223
Okinawa22
Osaka18345132
Saga5221
Saitama138221
Shiga6321
Shimane61221
Shizuoka1473112
Tochigi1024211
Tokushima55
Tokyo22719221
Tottori4112
Toyama61221
Wakayama6312
Yamagata931113
Yamaguchi94113
Yamanashi51121
Total468140949251438814

References edit

  1. ^ Dieter Nohlen, Florian Grotz & Christof Hartmann (2001) Elections in Asia: A data handbook, Volume II, p381 ISBN 0-19-924959-8