2020 Tokyo gubernatorial election

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2020 Tokyo gubernatorial election
Flag of Tokyo Metropolis.svg
← 2016 5 July 2020 2024 →
Turnout6,132,679 (55%)
  Yuriko Koike cropped.jpg Utsunomiya Kenji 2020.jpg Taro Yamamoto 202006 (cropped).jpg
Candidate Yuriko Koike Kenji Utsunomiya Tarō Yamamoto
Party Independent Independent Reiwa Shinsengumi
Popular vote 3,661,371 844,151 657,277
Percentage 59.7% 13.76% 10.72%
Supported by Tomin First[1] CDP, DPFP, JCP, SDP DPFP

  Ono taisuke.jpg Makoto Sakurai 01.JPG Tachibana takashi at shinkoiwa station.png
Candidate Taisuke Ono Makoto Sakurai Takashi Tachibana
Party Independent Japan First Horiemon New
Popular vote 612,530 178,784 43,912
Percentage 9.99% 2.92% 0.72%
Supported by Ishin N-Koku

2020 Tokyo Gubernatorial Election by municipalities.svg
Election results by municipalities. Incumbent governor Yuriko Koike swept all municipalities with more than 50% of popular votes.

Governor before election

Yuriko Koike
Independent

Elected Governor

Yuriko Koike
Independent

The 2020 Tokyo gubernatorial election took place on 5 July 2020 to elect the Governor of Tokyo. In a result viewed as an endorsement of her handling of Tokyo's response to the COVID-19 pandemic,[2] incumbent Yuriko Koike was re-elected by a wide margin,[2] increasing her share of the vote to 59.7%.[3]

Candidates[]

A total of 22 candidates registered candidacies for the election.[3]

Incumbent Governor Yuriko Koike announced her campaign for re-election on 12 June 2020.[4] Similar to her first campaign for Governor, Koike ran as an independent and did not receive the endorsement of any party, aside from the support of the regional Tomin First party which she founded in 2017. The ruling Liberal Democratic Party considered endorsing Koike in the 2020 election, unlike in the 2016 gubernatorial election in which the party endorsed a separate candidate, however the party ultimately chose not to endorse any candidate, instead encouraging members to vote freely.[5][6] Koike was widely expected to win a second term, based on opinion polling conducted in the weeks prior the election.[7]

Kenji Utsunomiya, a lawyer and former chairman of the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, announced his candidacy on 28 May 2020. Utsunomiya was considered the main opposition to Koike, having received endorsements from a coalition of opposition parties including the Constitutional Democratic Party, the Communist Party and the Social Democratic Party. This was Utsunomiya's third campaign for Governor of Tokyo, having also ran in the 2012 and 2014 elections.[8]

Other notable candidates included Tarō Yamamoto, a former actor who founded the anti-establishment and anti-nuclear energy party Reiwa Shinsengumi in 2019, Taisuke Ono, the former Vice Governor of Kumamoto, whose candidacy received the endorsement of Nippon Ishin no Kai, Makoto Sakurai, a far-right activist and the founder and leader of the Japan First Party, and Takashi Tachibana, the head of the anti-NHK N-Koku and a former member of the House of Councillors.[8]

Tokyo Review described the election as a "circus"[9] viewed by many candidates as marketing opportunity:

For less than $30,000, each candidate gets several minutes to broadcast whatever they want on NHK, an official statement delivered to every single household in Tokyo, and a prime outdoor location on every street in the city for their posters for two weeks.

Results[]

Tokyo gubernatorial election, 2020[3][10]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent (Supported by Tomin First) Yuriko Koike (incumbent) 3,661,371 59.7% Increase 15.21%
Independent (Supported by Constitutional Democratic, Democrats for the People, Communist, Social Democratic) Kenji Utsunomiya 844,151 13.76% N/A
Reiwa Shinsengumi (Supported by Democrats for the People) Tarō Yamamoto 657,277 10.72% N/A
Independent (Supported by Ishin) Taisuke Ono 612,530 9.99% N/A
Japan First Makoto Sakurai 178,784 2.92% Increase 1.23%
Horiemon New Party (Supported by The Party to Protect the People from NHK) Takashi Tachibana 43,912 0.72% Increase 0.20%
Happiness Realization Hiroko Nanami 22,003 0.36% Decrease 0.08%
Independent Teruki Gotō 21,997 0.36% Increase 0.25%
Independent Shion Sawa 20,738 0.34% N/A
Independent Makoto Nishimoto 11,887 0.19% N/A
Smile Hiroshi Komiyama 10,935 0.18% Decrease 0.60%
People's Sovereignty Party Masayuki Hiratsuka 8,997 0.15% N/A
Horiemon New Party (Supported by The Party to Protect the People from NHK) Osamu Hattori 5,453 0.09% N/A
Horiemon New Party (Supported by The Party to Protect the People from NHK) Kenichirō Saitō 5,114 0.08% N/A
Independent Hiroshi Ichikawa 4,760 0.08% N/A
Independent Hisao Naitō 4,145 0.07% N/A
Independent Yasuhiro Sekiguchi 4,097 0.07% Increase 0.05%
Independent Hideyuki Takemoto 3,997 0.07% N/A
Independent Hitoshi Ishi 3,356 0.05% N/A
Independent Yasuhiro Nagasawa 2,955 0.05% N/A
Independent Seiichi Oshikoshi 2,708 0.04% N/A
Independent Kazue Ushio 1,510 0.02% N/A
Turnout 6,132,679 55% Decrease 4.73% [11]

Simultaneous legislative by-elections[]

Four by-elections to the assembly were held together with the gubernatorial election: in Ota Ward, Kita Ward, Hino City and the North Tama 3rd electoral district (=Chofu City+Komae City).[12] All four were won by LDP candidates.[13]

References[]

  1. ^ "都民ファーストの会". tomin1st.jp.
  2. ^ a b Rich, Motoko (5 July 2020). "Tokyo's First Female Governor Sails to Re-Election Even as Virus Cases Rise". The New York Times.
  3. ^ a b c "開票速報|2020都知事選(東京都知事選挙):朝日新聞デジタル".
  4. ^ "It's official: Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike announces bid for re-election". 12 June 2020.
  5. ^ "LDP mulls support for Yuriko Koike's re-election as Tokyo governor". 25 March 2020.
  6. ^ "Koike's campaign for Tokyo governor corrodes Japanese party politics".
  7. ^ "A week before Tokyo gubernatorial election, Koike takes commanding lead in polls". 29 June 2020.
  8. ^ a b NEWS, KYODO. "PROFILES: Candidates of Tokyo governor election". Kyodo News+.
  9. ^ Fahey, Rob. "Tokyo's 2020 Election Devolves into Circus - Tokyo Review".
  10. ^ "市川浩司(いちかわ・ひろし) : 東京都知事選2020 候補者・結果 : 東京都知事選2020 : 地方選 : 選挙・世論調査(選挙)". 19 June 2020.
  11. ^ https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20200705/p2g/00m/0na/077000c[bare URL]
  12. ^ Tokyo Metropolitan Government, Secretariat to the electoral commission: 2020 electoral calendar, Metropolitan/prefectural elections, retrieved June 3, 2021.
  13. ^ Nihon Keizai Shimbun, July 6, 2020: 東京都議会、自民が第2党に 補選で4戦全勝, retrieved June 3, 2021..
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