1942 Japanese general election

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1942 Japanese general election

← 1937 30 April 1942 1946 →

All 466 seats in the House of Representatives
234 seats needed for a majority
  First party
  Hideki Tojo.jpg
Leader Hideki Tōjō
Party Taisei Yokusankai
Last election 421
Seats won 381
Seat change Decrease40
Popular vote 14,594,287
Percentage 83.16%

Prime Minister before election

Hideki Tōjō
Taisei Yokusankai

Prime Minister

Hideki Tōjō
Taisei Yokusankai

General elections were held in Japan on 30 April 1942 to elect members of the House of Representatives. They were the only elections held in Japan during the Pacific theater of World War II. By this time, the House of Representatives had lost all power to the military dictatorship, a process that started with the "Manchurian Incident" when the Imperial Army invaded Manchuria without approval from the (then still civilian) cabinet in 1931. Since 1932 when Admiral Viscount Saitō Makoto was appointed prime minister with the first so-called "national unity cabinet", few members of the political parties in the House of Representatives had any significant role in government. Additionally, the military had at this point transformed Japan into a totalitarian one-party state, with only the Imperial Rule Assistance Association and Imperial Army-sponsored "independents" contesting the election.

Background[]

The government of prime minister Hideki Tōjō held the election as a "General Election to Support the Greater East Asia War" at the end of April 1942, just days after the Doolittle Raid on Tokyo.[1]

In 1940, all political parties were forced to merge into the Imperial Rule Assistance Association (Taisei Yokusankai), a pro-military political organization headed by former prime minister Nobuyuki Abe. The likewise fascist Touhou Party broke away from the Taisei Yokusankai and turned against prime minister Hideki Tōjō. Among those running against the Taisei Yokunsakai, only the Touhou Party was allowed to run in the election as non-partisans. Among those anti-war and neutral politicians, the comparatively mild politicians successfully ran as non-partisans too. Some of those "independents" who failed to gain a seat were expelled. Those "independents" and expelled politicians were mainly the ruling class after the war. As communist groups, left-wing groups, and anti-war groups were illegal since 1940, they were unable to name a candidate in the election. Communists, left-wing politicians and radical anti-military politicians were arrested and not even allowed to run as independents, although anti-war politician Saitō Takao who was expelled from the diet in 1941 was re-elected again.[citation needed]

Notwithstanding the Tojo government's efforts, 613 candidates stood without endorsement while only 466 were endorsed.[1] Several non-endorsed candidates managed to win seats in the election, including Ichiro Hatoyama (who later served as prime minister and was the grandfather of Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama), Takeo Miki (who later served as prime minister), Kan Abe (the grandfather of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe) and Bukichi Miki.[2][3] The Tojo Cabinet marked those independent congressmen elected who were not Taisei Yokusankai members as "not endorsed" in the official result. Several of them, such as Hatoyama, were subject to the purge by the Allied authorities following the war despite the fact that they were not cooperating with the Tojo government.[3]

The turnout of the election was unusually high at 83.1%, partly reflecting the fierceness of the electoral battle.[1]

Results[]

The government won 381 seats out of the total 466; in some districts, its candidates won uncontested. The Imperial Army had gained a victory in almost every battle as of the election, public support for the war was still quite high, which was the main reason for the landslide victory of the Taisei Yokusankai. Although Japan nominally became a one-party state as a result of the election, the group of Yokusankai-endorsed candidates soon split into numerous factions, some of which became critical of the government as the war dragged on.[1]

Japanese Parliament 1942.svg
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Imperial Rule Assistance Association381New
Others85+51
Total4660
Total votes12,137,086
Registered voters/turnout14,594,28783.16
Source: Statistics Bureau of Japan

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Tsuzuki, Chushichi (2000). The Pursuit of Power in Modern Japan 1825-1995. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191542459.
  2. ^ "Japanese prime minister's another DNA". Dong-A Ilbo. 28 October 2013. Retrieved 15 January 2014.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Saunavaara, Juha (28 September 2009). "Occupation Authorities, the Hatoyama Purge and the Making of Japan's Postwar Political Order". Japan Focus. Retrieved 15 January 2014.
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