2014 Japanese general election

General elections were held in Japan on 14 December 2014. Voting took place in all Representatives constituencies of Japan including proportional blocks to elect the members of the House of Representatives, the lower house of the National Diet of Japan. As the cabinet resigns in the first post-election Diet session after a general House of Representatives election (Constitution, Article 70), the lower house election also led to a new election of the prime minister in the Diet, won by incumbent Shinzō Abe, and the appointment of a new cabinet (with some ministers re-appointed). The voter turnout in this election remains the lowest in Japanese history.

2014 Japanese general election
Japan
← 201214 December 20142017 →

All 475 seats in the House of Representatives
238 seats needed for a majority
Turnout52.65% (Decrease6.66pp)
PartyLeader%Seats+/–
Liberal DemocraticShinzō Abe33.11291−3
DemocraticBanri Kaieda18.3373+16
InnovationKenji Eda15.7241−13
KomeitoNatsuo Yamaguchi13.7135+4
CommunistKazuo Shii11.3721+13
Future GenerationsTakeo Hiranuma2.652New
Social DemocraticTadatomo Yoshida2.4620
People's LifeIchirō Ozawa1.932−7
Independents8+3
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Districts and PR districts shaded according to winners' vote strength.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Shinzō Abe
Liberal Democratic
Shinzō Abe
Liberal Democratic

Background edit

In 2012, the Democratic Party government under Yoshihiko Noda decided to raise the Japanese consumption tax. This unpopular moved allowed the Liberal Democratic Party under Shinzo Abe to regain control of the Japanese government in the 2012 Japanese general election. Abe proceeded to implement a series of economic programs known as "Abenomics" in a bid to stimulate the economy. Despite these programs, Japan entered a technical recession in mid-2014, which Abe blamed on the consumption tax hike, even though many members of the LDP supported the hike. Abe called a snap election on November 18, in part for the purpose of winning LDP backing to postpone the hike and pursue the Abenomics package.[1][2]

The LDP government was widely expected to win the election in a landslide, and many observers viewed the snap election as a mechanism for Abe to entrench his government at a time of relative popularity.[3]

Under 2013 changes to the electoral law designed to reduce malapportionment, district boundaries in 17 prefectures were redrawn and five districts are eliminated without replacement (one each in Fukui, Yamanashi, Tokushima, Kōchi and Saga). The number of first-past-the-post seats is reduced to 295, the total number of seats decreases to 475.[4]

Opinion polls edit

Parties' approval ratings from 2013 to 2014

(Source: NHK)

DateLead
LDPDPJJRPPFGNKPYPPLPJCPSDPGWNRPUPJIPOtherNo PartyUndecided
5–7 December38.1%11.7%0.1%5.9%0.3%4.3%0.9%0.0%3.7%0.1%26.3%8.5%11.8%
7–9 November36.6%7.9%0.2%2.2%0.0%0.0%3.5%0.6%1.2%0.1%40.0%7.7%3.4%
11–13 October40.2%5.6%0.1%4.1%0.5%0.1%3.3%0.9%1.4%0.1%35.0%8.8%5.2%
5–7 September40.4%5.4%0.7%0.1%4.3%0.0%0.2%3.3%0.5%0.1%0.4%36.9%7.8%3.5%
8–10 August36.7%6.4%1.0%0.3%3.0%0.2%0.3%3.2%0.7%0.0%0.0%39.4%8.8%2.7%
11–13 July34.3%4.8%1.7%3.6%0.5%0.3%3.4%0.9%0.1%0.3%42.5%7.6%8.2%
6–8 June36.9%5.1%1.1%4.0%0.4%0.1%2.8%0.6%0.0%0.1%42.4%6.7%5.5%
9–11 May41.4%5.6%1.1%3.7%0.2%0.3%2.4%0.9%0.2%0.1%37.2%6.9%4.2%
11–13 April38.1%7.4%1.3%3.4%0.9%0.2%3.6%0.6%0.1%0.2%37.2%5.2%0.9%
7–9 March38.7%6.5%1.1%2.2%0.8%0.1%3.3%0.8%0.4%0.1%40.0%5.2%1.3%
7–9 February36.2%5.8%1.3%3.9%1.1%0.3%3.3%1.4%0.5%0.2%41.0%5.2%4.8%
11–13 January40.4%5.8%1.6%2.8%0.8%0.1%1.6%0.7%0.1%0.3%40.3%5.5%0.1%
2014
6–8 December36.7%7.8%2.1%2.8%1.2%0.2%3.1%0.6%0.0%38.7%6.8%2.0%
8–10 November41.9%5.2%1.8%4.4%1.9%0.3%3.3%0.4%0.3%35.1%5.6%6.8%
12–14 October36.1%5.2%2.1%3.8%1.2%0.2%4.0%0.5%0.3%41.8%4.9%5.7%
6–8 September40.3%5.5%2.2%4.4%2.1%0.0%3.2%0.7%0.2%34.6%6.8%5.7%
9–11 August37.9%7.3%4.6%4.6%3.2%0.2%3.5%0.8%0.9%30.8%6.2%7.1%
5–7 July42.5%8.0%2.7%5.3%3.1%0.5%3.7%0.9%0.1%0.0%0.3%24.5%8.4%18.0%
7–9 June41.7%5.8%1.5%5.1%1.5%0.1%2.2%0.4%0.0%0.0%0.2%34.6%7.0%7.1%
10–12 May43.4%5.3%2.4%3.7%2.3%0.3%2.0%1.1%0.0%0.0%0.1%33.3%6.1%10.1%
5–7 April43.6%6.1%2.1%3.7%1.3%0.4%2.0%0.7%0.0%0.0%0.1%34.5%5.6%9.1%
8–10 March40.1%7.0%3.9%4.4%3.1%0.3%2.1%0.6%0.0%0.0%0.1%31.8%6.6%8.3%
10–12 February40.4%7.0%5.3%3.1%2.6%0.3%2.1%0.8%0.1%0.0%0.3%31.7%6.3%8.7%
12–14 January37.8%7.6%6.5%4.0%3.7%0.5%2.7%0.8%0.0%0.0%0.3%30.8%5.4%7.0%
2013
Cabinet approval/disapproval ratings
Approval (blue) and Disapproval (red) Ratings for Second and Third Abe Cabinet
DatePM
ApprovalDisapproval
5–7 DecemberShinzo Abe47%38%
7–9 NovemberShinzo Abe44%38%
11–13 OctoberShinzo Abe52%34%
5–7 SeptemberShinzo Abe58%28%
8–10 AugustShinzo Abe51%33%
11–13 JulyShinzo Abe47%38%
6–8 JuneShinzo Abe52%32%
9–11 MayShinzo Abe56%29%
11–13 AprilShinzo Abe52%31%
7–9 MarchShinzo Abe51%30%
7–9 FebruaryShinzo Abe52%33%
11–13 JanuaryShinzo Abe54%31%
2014
21–22 December[5]Shinzo Abe49%34%
6–8 DecemberShinzo Abe50%35%
8–10 NovemberShinzo Abe60%25%
12–14 OctoberShinzo Abe58%26%
6–8 SeptemberShinzo Abe59%23%
9–11 AugustShinzo Abe57%29%
5–7 JulyShinzo Abe57%25%
7–9 JuneShinzo Abe62%20%
10–12 MayShinzo Abe65%18%
5–7 AprilShinzo Abe66%19%
23–24 March[6]Shinzo Abe69%6%
9–10 March[7]Shinzo Abe76%22%
8–10 MarchShinzo Abe66%18%
10–12 FebruaryShinzo Abe64%20%
8–10 February[8]Shinzo Abe71%18%
12–14 JanuaryShinzo Abe64%22%
11–13 January[8]Shinzo Abe68%24%
2013

Results edit

Constituency Cartogram

The LDP lost a small number of seats but slightly enlarged its majority coalition with Komeito. Turnout was a record low, and many voters viewed the election as a waste of time and money. DPJ president Banri Kaieda lost his seat in Tokyo while the Japanese Communist Party doubled in strength.[9][10] The right-leaning Japan Innovation Party and Party for Future Generations lost seats.[11]

21
2
2
73
35
41
284
2
8
PartyProportionalConstituencyTotal
seats
+/–
Votes%SeatsVotes%Seats
Liberal Democratic Party17,658,91633.116825,461,44948.10223291–3
Democratic Party of Japan9,775,99118.333511,916,84922.513873+16
Japan Innovation Party8,382,69915.72304,319,6468.161141–13
Komeito7,314,23613.7126765,3901.45935+4
Japanese Communist Party6,062,96211.37207,040,17013.30121+13
Party for Future Generations1,414,9192.650947,3961.7922New
Social Democratic Party1,314,4412.461419,3470.79120
People's Life Party1,028,7211.930514,5750.9722–7
Happiness Realization Party260,1110.49000
Shiji Seitō Nashi104,8540.2000New
New Renaissance Party16,5970.03000
Genzei Nippon32,7590.0600New
Future Party4,8830.0100New
Katsuko Inumaru and Republican Party4,6680.01000
World Economic Community Party1,4160.00000
Independents1,511,2422.8588+3
Total53,334,447100.0018052,939,790100.00295475–5
Valid votes53,334,44797.4552,939,79096.71
Invalid/blank votes1,398,2832.551,801,5623.29
Total votes54,732,730100.0054,741,352100.00
Registered voters/turnout103,962,78552.65103,962,78452.65
Source: Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, CLEA

By prefecture edit

PrefectureTotal
seats
Seats won
LDPDPJJIPKomeitoPFGPLPJCPSDPInd.
Aichi15861
Akita33
Aomori44
Chiba13112
Ehime44
Fukui22
Fukuoka1111
Fukushima5311
Gifu55
Gunma55
Hiroshima761
Hokkaido12831
Hyōgo1271121
Ibaraki7511
Ishikawa33
Iwate4121
Kagawa321
Kagoshima541
Kanagawa18132111
Kōchi22
Kumamoto541
Kyoto642
Mie532
Miyagi651
Miyazaki33
Nagano5311
Nagasaki44
Nara431
Niigata651
Ōita321
Okayama541
Okinawa41111
Osaka199154
Saga211
Saitama151221
Shiga44
Shimane22
Shizuoka862
Tochigi541
Tokushima22
Tokyo2522111
Tottori22
Toyama33
Wakayama321
Yamagata33
Yamaguchi44
Yamanashi211
Total2952233811922118

By PR block edit

PR blockTotal
seats
Seats won
LDPDPJJIPKomeitoJCPSDP
Chūgoku1152121
Hokkaido832111
Hokuriku–Shinetsu1153111
Kinki2994844
Kyushu21833421
Northern Kanto2084332
Shikoku63111
Southern Kanto2284433
Tohoku1454221
Tokai2185332
Tokyo1763323
Total18068353026201

Notable losses edit

The most high-profile LDP candidate to lose re-election is Agriculture Minister Koya Nishikawa, who lost by 199 votes (0.2%) to former Governor of Tochigi Akio Fukuda.[12] He was questioned in October after allegedly receiving financial support from a fraudulent company.[13]

Amongst the DPJ members to lose their seats were party leader Banri Kaieda.[14] Party for Future Generations leader Shintaro Ishihara was also unsuccessful in his attempt to win a seat after receiving a low position on his party's representative ballot.[14]

Former leader of the now-dissolved Your Party and six-term representative for Tochigi-3rd district Yoshimi Watanabe was also defeated.[15]

The JCP gained its first single-seat constituency seat since the 1996 election. Amidst a growing anti-base movement in Okinawa, JCP candidate Seiken Akamine unseated LDP incumbent Kōnosuke Kokuba in a night marked with a nationwide JCP surge.[16]

Representatives edit

Members of House of Representatives elected from single-seat constituency edit

 LDP   Komei   DPJ   JIP   JCP   SDP   PLP   PFG   Independent 

Hokkaido1stTakahiro Yokomichi2ndTakamori Yoshikawa3rdHirohisa Takagi4thHiroyuki Nakamura5thNobutaka Machimura
6thTakahiro Sasaki7thYoshitaka Itō8thSeiji Osaka9thManabu Horii10thHisashi Inatsu
11thYūko Nakagawa12thArata Takebe
Aomori1stJun Tsushima2ndAkinori Eto3rdTadamori Ōshima4thTarō Kimura
Iwate1stTakeshi Shina2ndShunichi Suzuki3rdToru Kikawada4thIchirō Ozawa
Miyagi1stTōru Doi2ndKenya Akiba3rdAkihiro Nishimura4thShintaro Ito5thJun Azumi
6thItsunori Onodera
Akita1stHiroyuki Togashi2ndKatsutoshi Kaneda3rdNobuhide Minorikawa
Yamagata1stToshiaki Endo2ndNorikazu Suzuki3rdAyuko Kato
Fukushima1stYoshitami Kameoka2ndTakumi Nemoto3rdKōichirō Genba4thShinji Oguma5thMasayoshi Yoshino
Ibaraki1stYoshinori Tadokoro2ndFukushiro Nukaga3rdYasuhiro Hanashi4thHiroshi Kajiyama5thAkihiro Ohata
6thYuya Niwa7thKishirō Nakamura
Tochigi1stHajime Funada2ndAkio Fukuda3rdKazuo Yana4thTsutomu Sato5thToshimitsu Motegi
Gunma1stGenichiro Sata2ndToshirō Ino3rdHiroyoshi Sasagawa4thTatsuo Fukuda5thYūko Obuchi
Saitama1stHideki Murai2ndYoshitaka Shindō3rdHitoshi Kikawada4thMayuko Toyota5thYukio Edano
6thAtsushi Oshima7thSaichi Kamiyama8thMasahiko Shibayama9thTaku Otsuka10thTaimei Yamaguchi
11thRyuji Koizumi12thAtsushi Nonaka13thShinako Tsuchiya14thHiromi Mitsubayashi15thRyosei Tanaka
Chiba1stKaname Tajima2ndTakayuki Kobayashi3rdHirokazu Matsuno4thYoshihiko Noda5thKentaro Sonoura
6thHiromichi Watanabe7thKen Saitō8thYoshitaka Sakurada9thMasatoshi Akimoto10thMotoo Hayashi
11thEisuke Mori12thYasukazu Hamada13thTakaki Shirasuka
Kanagawa1stJun Matsumoto2ndYoshihide Suga3rdHachiro Okonogi4thKeiichiro Asao5thManabu Sakai
6thIsamu Ueda7thKeisuke Suzuki8thKenji Eda9thHirofumi Ryu10thKazunori Tanaka
11thShinjiro Koizumi12thTsuyoshi Hoshino13thAkira Amari14thJiro Akama15thTaro Kono
16thYūichi Goto17thKaren Makishima18thDaishiro Yamagiwa
Yamanashi1stKatsuhito Nakajima2ndKotaro Nagasaki
Tokyo1stMiki Yamada2ndKiyoto Tsuji3rdHirotaka Ishihara4thMasaaki Taira5thKenji Wakamiya
6thTakao Ochi7thAkira Nagatsuma8thNobuteru Ishihara9thIsshu Sugawara10thYuriko Koike
11thHakubun Shimomura12thAkihiro Ōta13thIchiro Kamoshita14thMidori Matsushima15thMito Kakizawa
16thHideo Ōnishi17thKatsuei Hirasawa18thMasatada Tsuchiya19thYohei Matsumoto20thSeiji Kihara
21stKiyoshi Odawara22ndTatsuya Ito23rdMasanobu Ogura24thKōichi Hagiuda25thShinji Inoue
Niigata1stToru Ishizaki2ndKenichi Hosoda3rdTakahiro Kuroiwa4thMegumi Kaneko5thTadayoshi Nagashima
6thShuichi Takatori
Toyama1stHiroaki Tabata2ndMitsuhiro Miyakoshi3rdKeiichiro Tachibana
Ishikawa1stHiroshi Hase2ndHajime Sasaki3rdShigeo Kitamura
Fukui1stTomomi Inada2ndTsuyoshi Takagi
Nagano1stTakashi Shinohara2ndShunsuke Mutai3rdYōsei Ide1stShigeyuki Goto5thIchiro Miyashita
Gifu1stSeiko Noda2ndYasufumi Tanahashi3rdYoji Muto4thKazuyoshi Kaneko5thKeiji Furuya
Shizuoka1stYōko Kamikawa2ndTatsunori Ibayashi3rdHiroyuki Miyazawa4thYoshio Mochizuki5thGoshi Hosono
6thShu Watanabe7thMinoru Kiuchi8thRyu Shionoya
Aichi1stHiromichi Kumada2ndMotohisa Furukawa3rdShoichi Kondo4thShōzō Kudo5thHirotaka Akamatsu
6thHideki Niwa7thShiori Yamao8thTadahiko Ito9thYasumasa Nagasaka10thTetsuma Esaki
11thShinichiro Furumoto12thKazuhiko Shigetoku13thKensuke Ōnishi14thSōichirō Imaeda1stYukinori Nemoto
Mie1stJiro Kawasaki2ndMasaharu Nakagawa3rdKatsuya Okada4thNorihisa Tamura5thNorio Mitsuya
Shiga1stFujitaka Ōoka2ndKenichiro Ueno3rdNobuhide Takemura4thTakaya Muto
Kyoto1stBunmei Ibuki2ndSeiji Maehara3rdKensuke Miyazaki4thHideyuki Tanaka5thSadakazu Tanigaki
6thKazunori Yamanoi
Osaka1stHidetaka Inoue2ndAkira Satō3rdShigeki Sato4thYasuhide Nakayama5thTōru Kunishige
6thShinichi Isa7thNaomi Tokashiki8thTakashi Ōtsuka9thKenji Harada10thKiyomi Tsujimoto
11thYukari Sato12thTomokatsu Kitagawa13thKōichi Munekiyo14thTakashi Tanihata15thNaokazu Takemoto
16thKazuo Kitagawa17thNobuyuki Baba18thTakashi Endo19thHodaka Maruyama
Hyōgo1stNobuhiko Isaka2ndKazuyoshi Akaba3rdYoshihiro Seki4thHisayuki Fujii5thKoichi Tani
6thMasaki Ōgushi7thKenji Yamada8thHiromasa Nakano9thYasutoshi Nishimura10thKisabro Tokai
11thTakeaki Matsumoto12thTsuyoshi Yamaguchi
Nara1stSumio Mabuchi2ndSanae Takaichi3rdShinsuke Okuno4thTaido Tanose
Wakayama1stShuhei Kishimoto2ndMasatoshi Ishida3rdToshihiro Nikai
Tottri1stShigeru Ishiba2ndRyosei Akazawa
Shimane1stHiroyuki Hosoda2ndWataru Takeshita
Okayama1stIchiro Aizawa2ndTakashi Yamashita3rdTakeo Hiranuma4thGaku Hashimoto5thKatsunobu Kato
Hiroshima1stFumio Kishida2ndHiroshi Hiraguchi3rdKatsuyuki Kawai4thToshinao Nakagawa5thMinoru Terada
6thShizuka Kamei7thFumiaki Kobayashi
Yamaguchi1stMasahiko Kōmura2ndNobuo Kishi3rdTakeo Kawamura4thShinzo Abe
Tokushima1stMasazumi Gotoda2ndShunichi Yamaguchi
Kagawa1stTakuya Hirai2ndYuichiro Tamaki3rdKeitaro Ohno
Ehime1stYasuhisa Shiozaki2ndSeiichiro Murakami3rdToru Shiraishi4thKoichi Yamamoto
Kōchi1stGen Nakatani2ndYūji Yamamoto
Fukuoka1stTakahiro Inoue2ndMakoto Oniki3rdAtsushi Koga4thHideki Miyauchi5thYoshiaki Harada
6thKunio Hatoyama7thSatoshi Fujimaru8thTarō Asō9thAsahiko Mihara10thKōzō Yamamoto
11thRyota Takeda
Saga1stKazuhiro Haraguchi2ndYasushi Furukawa
Nagasaki1stTsutomu Tomioka2ndKanji Kato3rdYaichi Tanigawa4thSeigo Kitamura
Kumamoto1stMinoru Kihara2ndTakeshi Noda3rdTetsushi Sakamoto4thHiroyuki Sonoda5thYasushi Kaneko
Ōita1stShuji Kira2ndSeishiro Eto3rdTakeshi Iwaya
Miyazaki1stShunsuke Takei2ndTaku Etō3rdYoshihisa Furukawa
Kagoshima1stOkiharu Yasuoka2ndMasuo Kaneko3rdTakeshi Noma4thYasuhiro Ozato5thHiroshi Moriyama
Okinawa1stSeiken Akamine2ndKantoku Teruya3rdDenny Tamaki4thToshinobu Nakasato

By-election edit

YearMonth and dateDistrictWinnerPartyVacancyPartyNotes
2015There was a reason for the implementation, but it was originally scheduled to hold a by-election in Hokkaido 5th district, but it was postponed to the next election due to apportionment lawsuit. There were no national elections in 2015.
2016April 24Hokkaido-5thYoshiaki WadaLDPNobutaka MachimuraLDPMachimura died on June 1, 2015.
Kyoto-3rdKenta IzumiDPKensuke MiyazakiLDPMiyazaki resigned as a member of the House of Representatives on February 16, 2016, to take responsibility for his adultery.
October 23Fukuoka-6thJiro HatoyamaIndependentKunio HatoyamaLDPHatoyama died on June 21, 2016.
Tokyo-10thMasaru WakasaLDPYuriko KoikeLDPKoike resigned as a member of the House of Representatives July 14, 2016 to run for 2016 Tokyo gubernatorial election.
2017Aomori-4thTarō KimuraLDPKimura died on July 25, 2017.
Niigata-5thTadayoshi NagashimaLDPNagashima died on August 18, 2017.
Ehime-3rdToru ShiraishiLDPShiraishi died on March 17, 2017.
  • By-election for Aomori 4th district, Niigata 5th district, and Ehime 3rd district was scheduled to be held in October 2017, but by-election was canceled because the House of Representatives was dissolved and 2017 Japanese general election was held.

Members of House of Representatives elected from proportional representation block edit

 LDP   Komei   DPJ   JIP   JCP   SDP 

HokkaidoTohokuNorthern KantoSouthern KantoTokyoHokurikushinetsuTokaiKinkiChugokuShikokuKyushu
1Koichi WatanabeIchiro KankeKoya NishikawaShinichi NakataniTsukasa AkimotoTaku YamamotoJunji SuzukiTakashi NagaoToshiko AbeTeru FukuiKazuchika Iwata
2Takako SuzukiEmi KanekoYasuko KomiyamaTomoko AbeAkihisa NagashimaEiichiro WashioYasuhiro NakaneSakihito OzawaToshifumi KojimaJunya OgawaYasuyuki Eda
3Hiroshi ImazuTakashi FujiwaraHideki MakiharaNoriko MiyagawaFumiaki MatsumotoHiroaki SaitoTakaaki KatsumataYuzuru TakeuchiMichiyoshi YunokiMamoru FukuyamaYoichi Anami
4Satoshi AraiSekio MasudaKeiichi IshiiKazumi ŌtaAkira KasaiToyofumi YoshidaMasato ImaiHiroyuki ŌnishiTetsuo SaitoNoritoshi IshidaHiroshi Ōgushi
5Hidemichi SatoYōsuke KondōYūnosuke SakamotoShigeyuki TomitaTakayuki OchiaiYutaka KomatsuYoshinori ŌguchiYasushi AdachiMasayoshi ShintaniHiroyuki YokoyamaYorihisa Matsuno
6Kazuya HatayamaYoshihisa InoueTetsuya ShiokawaKazuo ShiiYōsuke TakagiMakiko KikutaYutaka BannoKeiji KokutaTakashi TakaiTakakazu SetoKosaburo Nishime
7Kazuo MaedaHinako TakahashiKazuyuki NakaneHiroyuki YoshiieHayato SuzukiYasufumi FujinoShuhei AoyamaKenta IzumiMichitaka IkedaTakaaki Tamura
8Kenko MatsukiChizuko TakahashiTakeshi MiyazakiSoichiro OkunoJin MatsubaraYoshio UrushibaraNobuko MotomuraNoboru KamitaniYoshinobu OhiraKiyohiko Toyama
9Hidenori HashimotoAkimasa IshikawaNorihiro NakayamaMegumi MaekawaHitoshi KiuchiYoshitaka IkedaTomohiko KinoshitaKeisuke TsumuraKōnosuke Kokuba
10Manabu TerataMitsunari OkamotoYoichiro AoyagiToru MiyamotoChinami NishimuraMitsunori OkamotoTomoko UkishimaKeigo MasuyaYoshiaki Takaki
11Shigeaki KatsunumaYoshihiro SuzukiHiroaki KadoyamaAkihiro HatsushikaShigeyoshi SukedaYoshio MakiHiroshi AndoKeiichi FurutaTakuma Miyaji
12Toshihide MuraokaKeiko NagaokaNoriko FuruyaMasaru WakasaSei ŌmiHirofumi YoshimuraMasami Kawano
13Kazuko KōriKoichi TakemasaKimie HatanoMichiyo TakagiWataru ItoTakeshi MiyamotoMasakazu Hamachi
14Yūichi MayamaSaeko UmemuraKentaro MotomuraNaoto KanNobuhiro KoyamaTatsuo KawabataNatsumi Higa
15Tomohiro KonnoNoriko HoriuchiTsuneo AkaedaKenji KandaTomu TanigawaRintaro Ogata
16Asako OmiGō ShinoharaSaori IkeuchiNaohisa MatsudaYasuto UranoHajime Yoshikawa
17Keiichi KoshimizuTomohiro YamamotoTakakane KiuchiYukihiro ShimazuNaoya HiguchiMasahisa Miyazaki
18Takashi IshizekiYōsuke KamiyamaTetsuya YagiShohei OkashitaShozo Majima
19Nobuyuki FukushimaHideo TsunodaKatsumasa SuzukiSayuri UenishiNobuhiro Yoshida
20Yayoi KimuraMineyuki FukudaYoshikazu ShimadaTadashi ShimizuMikio Shimoji
21Kazuko SaitoYasuhiro NakagawaHirofumi KadoMasahiro Imamura
22Masashi MitoIssei Tajima
23Kenta Matsunami
24Susumu Hamamura
25Kazuhide Ōkuma
26Nobuhisa Ito
27Masahito Moriyama
28Terufumi Horiuchi
29Hirofumi Hirano

People who were elected in PR following the resignation of another member of the House of Representatives edit

YearMonthblockWinnerPartyVacancyNotes
2015OctoberKinkiTamotsu ShiikiJIPHirofumi YoshimuraYoshimura resigned as a member of the House of Representatives on October 1, 2015, to run for 2015 Osaka mayoral election.
2016AprilKinkiKeiro KitagakiDPJKenta IzumiIzumi lost his job as a member of the House of Representatives on April 12, 2016, to run for the by-election in Kyoto 3rd district.
OctoberTokyoTsuyoshi TabataLDPMasaru WakasaWakasa lost his job as a member of the House of Representatives October 11, 2016, to run for the by-election in Tokyo 10th district.
2017JulyTohokuIzumi YoshidaDPJKazuko KōriKōri lost her job as a member of the House of Representatives on July 9, 2017, to run for 2017 Sendai mayoral election.

Aftermath edit

In November 2015, the Grand Bench of the Supreme Court ruled that the inequality in vote weight due to malapportionment was still in an unconstitutional state (iken jōtai); however, as in previous such rulings, it dismissed the demand to invalidate the election.[17][18]

References edit

  1. ^ Wakatabe, Masazumi. "Election With A Cause: Why Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe Must Call General Election Now". Forbes. Retrieved 2016-07-14.
  2. ^ McCurry, Justin (2014-11-18). "Japan calls snap election". the Guardian. Retrieved 2016-07-14.
  3. ^ Boyd, John. "Japan's unwanted election: Why now?". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2016-07-14.
  4. ^ Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications: 衆議院小選挙区の区割りの改定等について
  5. ^ "Approval rating for Abe Cabinet falls below 50% for 1st time since inauguration: Mainichi poll (in English)". Mainichi Shimbun. 24 December 2013. Archived from the original on 6 January 2014. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  6. ^ "【産経・FNN合同世論調査】安倍内閣支持69・6%に上昇 鳩山内閣発足時を超える". MSN産経ニュース. Archived from the original on 2013-03-03. Retrieved 2013-03-24.
  7. ^ TBS/JNN
  8. ^ a b 内閣支持率71%、2回連続上昇...読売世論調査
  9. ^ "Abe coalition secures big Japan election win with record low turnout". Reuters. 2014-12-15. Retrieved 2016-07-14.
  10. ^ "Japan election: Voters back Shinzo Abe as PM wins new term - BBC News". BBC News. 14 December 2014. Retrieved 2016-07-14.
  11. ^ "Romping home". The Economist. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 2016-07-14.
  12. ^ NHK(Japan Broadcasting Corporation). "NHK2014衆院選".
  13. ^ "Sukyandaru: Shinzo Abe's plan to raise the profile of women in his cabinet is in tatters". The Economist. 25 October 2014.
  14. ^ a b "Abe tightens grip on power as ruling coalition wins 325 seats in Lower House election". The Japan Times. 15 December 2014.
  15. ^ "Ex-Your Party leader Watanabe, ex-Tokyo Gov. Ishihara to lose seats". mainichi.jp. Archived from the original on 2014-12-15.
  16. ^ Aoki, Mizuho (15 December 2014). "Resurgent JCP has night to remember". Japan Times. Retrieved 11 December 2017.
  17. ^ Nihon Keizai Shimbun, November 25, 2015: 14年衆院選、1票の格差は「違憲状態」 最高裁大法廷
  18. ^ The Japan Times, November 25, 2015: Supreme Court says December election ‘in state of unconstitutionality,’ but won't nullify results

External links edit

Media related to Japanese general election, 2014 at Wikimedia Commons