Kōchikai

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kōchikai
宏池会
LeaderFumio Kishida
FounderHayato Ikeda
Founded1957
IdeologyConservatism
Liberal conservatism
Paternalistic conservatism
Political positionCentre-right, Big tent
TypeLiberal Democratic Party faction
Website
kouchikai1957.com

Kōchikai (宏池会, "Broad Pond Society") is a leading faction within Japan's Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), founded by bureaucrat-turned-politician Ikeda Hayato in 1957. Currently headed by Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida, it has produced five prime ministers (Ikeda, Masayoshi Ōhira, Zenkō Suzuki, Kiichi Miyazawa, and Kishida), two LDP presidents (Yōhei Kōno and Sadakazu Tanigaki), and a large number of cabinet officeholders.

One of the most moderate factions within the conservative LDP, the Kōchikai faction has typically supported a dovish foreign policy, including diplomatic engagement, preservation of Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution forbidding Japan from having a military, and close relations with the United States.[1] In terms of domestic policy, Kōchikai has tended to support moderate efforts to combat income inequality and expand or strengthen the social safety net in ways consistent with fostering economic growth. Among the interest groups in the LDP's base, the Kōchikai faction tends to draw support from government bureaucrats, big business organizations, white-collar workers and other urban professionals, and small business owners.

History[]

Kōchikai was founded in 1957 by Hayato Ikeda as he prepared to contest against his rivals for Liberal Democratic Party leadership and the premiership itself.[2][3] Originally, it was modeled on a think tank, and was initially called the "Kōchikai Policy Study Group" (宏池会政策研究会). The name Kōchikai ("Broad Pond Society") was given to the group by right-wing power broker Masahiro Yasuoka, and was taken from a line from the Eastern Han dynasty poet Ma Rong: "Let's go lie in the pavilion on the hill, and gaze at the broad pond."[2][3] It was also a pun on Ikeda's surname, which means "rice field by the pond."[3]

Early members of the group tended to be bureaucrats or ex-bureaucrats drawn from the ranks of government ministries and included, in addition to Ikeda himself, Masayoshi Ōhira, Shigesaburō Maeo, Osamu Shimomura, Zentarō Kosaka, and Kiichi Miyazawa.[4][5] In the early years, the group was nicknamed Ikeda's "brain trust" (burēn), and played a key role in formulating the Income Doubling Plan that propelled Ikeda to electoral victory in the 1960 general election and two terms as prime minister.[6] During the Ikeda years, Kōchikai published policy papers by group members in the group's monthly in-house journal The Way Forward (進路, Shinro).[7]

Following Ikeda's death in 1965, headship of the faction passed to Maeo, but as Eisaku Satō won four consecutive terms as prime minister, younger members of the faction became dissatisfied with Maeo's leadership and finally voted him out in favor of Ōhira, in what became known as the "Ōhira coup" of 1971.[4] Under Ōhira's adroit leadership, the faction grew rapidly. As Ōhira recruited new members, the percentage of Kōchikai members who were ex-bureaucrats gradually declined, reaching a new low of only 40 percent of the faction in 1979, and continuing to decline thereafter.[4]

Ōhira's sudden death in 1980, while still in office as prime minister, left both headship of Kōchikai and the premiership itself in the hands of faction member Zenkō Suzuki.[4] Suzuki declined to run for reelection as LDP party head in 1982, ending his stint as prime minister, but remained head of the Kōchikai faction until 1986, at which time he relinquished headship to Miyazawa as part of a broader strategic effort to unseat prime minister Yasuhiro Nakasone.

Miyazawa was powerful enough to become prime minister in 1991, but his policy objectives were consistently thwarted by a rival LDP faction led by Noboru Takeshita, until finally a schism within the Takeshita faction brought down Miyazawa's government and handed power to the opposition parties in 1993. However, Miyazawa remained head of Kōchikai, and in 1994 helped engineer the LDP's return to power after a brief interregnum. This made Kōchikai powerful enough to have Kōchikai member Yōhei Kōno elected LDP party president. However, in 1998, a fierce battle broke out between Kōno and fellow Kōchikai member Kōichi Katō over who would succeed Miyazawa as head of Kōchikai, in what became known as the "KK War."[4] Both men undermined each other, and although Katō ultimately "won" the war to become Kōchikai head, he became the first head of Kōchikai since Maeo not to become prime minister, and Kōno became the first LDP president ever not to become prime minister.

The chaos caused by the vicious KK War and later schisms left Kōchikai weakened under the next two faction heads, Mitsuo Horiuchi (2001-2006) and Makoto Koga (2006-2012).[4][8] However, the faction still remained powerful enough to play a kingmaker role by throwing its support to one candidate or another. For example, when Shinzō Abe resigned from his first stint as prime minister in 2007, Kōchikai's support proved decisive in handing the premiership to Yasuo Fukuda instead of heavy favorite Tarō Asō.

Kōchikai's fortunes began to revive under Koga's handpicked successor, Fumio Kishida, a party deep insider whose father and grandfather had both served in the Diet and who had held a series of cabinet posts in both Abe administrations and the Fukuda administration. A moderate who could win support from across the party, Kishida defeated maverick lawmaker Tarō Kōno in the party presidential election in September 2021.

Kōchikai faction heads[]

Faction heads who became prime minister are in bold.

No. Faction head Years
1 Hayato Ikeda 1957–1965
2 Shigesaburō Maeo 1965–1971
3 Masayoshi Ōhira 1971–1980
4 Zenkō Suzuki 1980–1986
5 Kiichi Miyazawa 1986–1998
6 Kōichi Katō 1998–2001
7 Mitsuo Horiuchi 2001–2006
8 Makoto Koga 2006–2012
9 Fumio Kishida 2012–present

See also[]

References[]

Citations[]

  1. ^ Yoshida 2015.
  2. ^ a b Matsumoto 2021, p. 2.
  3. ^ a b c Ozawa 2017, p. 5.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Zakowski 2011.
  5. ^ Kapur 2018, pp. 76, 101.
  6. ^ Kapur 2018, pp. 76, 100–101.
  7. ^ Kapur 2018, p. 99.
  8. ^ Hirata 2016, p. 64.

Sources cited[]

  • Hirata, Keiko (2016). "Role Theory and Japanese Security Policy". In Cantir, Christian; Kaarbo, Juliet (eds.). Domestic Role Contestation, Foreign Policy, and International Relations. Routledge. ISBN 978-1138653801.
  • Kapur, Nick (2018). Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674984424.
  • Matsumoto, Haruto (September 17, 2021). "自民党総裁選 ビジネスにも通ずるエピソード". Nikkei Shimbun BizGate (in Japanese). Retrieved September 29, 2021.
  • Ozawa, Keita (November 28, 2017). "なぜか「宏池会」が大流行 左派含め与野党問わず標榜 本家の岸田政調会長は困惑". Sankei Shimbun (in Japanese). Retrieved September 29, 2021.
  • Yoshida, Reiji (October 8, 2015). "Tide Turns for LDP Factions in Reshuffle". The Japan Times. Retrieved September 29, 2021.
  • Zakowski, Karol (December 2011). "Kochikai of the Japanese Liberal Democratic Party and Its Evolution After the Cold War". The Korean Journal of International Studies. 9 (2): 179–205. doi:10.14731/kjis.2011.12.9.2.179.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""