Liberalism in Japan

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Japanese liberalism (自由主義)[note 1] formed in the nineteenth century as a reaction against traditional society. In the twentieth century 'liberal' (自由) gradually became a synonym for conservative, and today the main conservative party in the country is named Liberal Democratic Party (Jiyu Minshuto). The defunct Democratic Party (Minshuto) was considered in part a centrist-liberal party, as are most parties which derived from it. The liberal character of the Liberal League (Jiyu Rengo) is disputed, as it is also considered to be conservative by some. Liberals in Japan are generally considered united by one major factor: their opposition to changing the post-World War II constitution forbidding the creation of a national military.[2] This article is limited to liberal parties with substantial support, proved by having had representation in parliament. The sign ⇒ means a reference to another party in that scheme. For inclusion in this scheme it isn't necessary that parties labelled themselves "liberal".

Timeline[]

From Public Society of Patriots until Constitutional Politics Party[]

  • 1874: Liberals founded the Public Society of Patriots (Aikoku Koto)
  • 1881: The Aikoku Koto is continued by the Liberal Party (Jiyu-to)
  • 1891: The Jiyuto is renamed into (Rikken Jiyuto)
  • 1898: The Constitutional Liberal Party merged with the ⇒ Progressive Party into the (Kenseito)
  • 1898: A faction seceded as the ⇒ Constitutional Center Party
  • 1900: The party is taken over by the oligarchy and renamed into Constitutional Political Friends Association (Rikken Seiyukai)

From Constitutional Progressive Party to Reform Club[]

  • 1882: The (Rikken Kaishinto) is formed
  • 1896: The party is continued by the Progressive Party (Shinpoto)
  • 1898: The party merged into the (Kenseito)
  • 1898: This party fell apart and a faction of the Kenseito formed the (Kensei Honto), renamed in 1910 into the Constitutional National Party (Rikken Kokuminto)
  • 1913: A faction seceded as the ⇒ Constitutional Association of Allies
  • 1922: The Constitutional National Party is renamed (Kakushin Kurabu)
  • 1920s: The Reform Club merged into the Constitutional Association of Political Friendship

From Constitutional Association of Allies to Constitutional Democratic Party[]

  • 1913: A faction of the ⇒ Constitutional National Party formed the Constitutional Association of Allies (Rikken Doshikai), renamed Constitutional Association (Kenseikai) in 1916
  • 1927: The Constitutional Association merged with the ⇒ Authentic Constitutional Party of Political Friendship into the Constitutional Democratic Party (Rikken Minseito)
  • 1940: The party is dissolved by the military junta

Authentic Constitutional Party of Political Friendship[]

  • 1924: A faction of the Constitutional Association of Political Friendship formed the (Seiyu Honto)
  • 1927: The party merged into the ⇒ Constitutional Democratic Party

From Renewal Party to Liberal Party (1993)[]

  • 1993: A liberal faction of the conservative Liberal Democratic Party (Jiyu-Minshuto) seceded as the Renewal Party (Shinseito)
  • 1994: The Renewal Party merged with other factions into the New Frontier Party (Shinshinto)
  • 1997: The New Frontier Party fell apart into many parties, among them since 1998 the Liberal Party (Jiyuto), but also the Good Governance Party (Minseito), the New Fraternity Party (Shinto-Yuai) and the Democratic Reform Party (Minshu-Kaikaku-Rengo)
  • 2000: Dissidents of the Liberal Party formed the New Conservative Party (Hoshuto)
  • 2003: The Liberal Party merged into the ⇒ Democratic Party of Japan

New Party Harbinger[]

  • 1993: A liberal faction of the conservative Liberal Democratic Party (Jiyu-Minshuto) seceded as the New Party Harbinger (Shinto Sakigake)
  • 1996: Most members co-found the ⇒ Democratic Party of Japan
  • 1998: The party evolved in conservative direction, renamed into Harbinger (Sakigake) and further renamed in 2002 into (Midori No Kaigi)

Democratic Party of Japan (1998-2016)[]

CDP and DPP (2016-present)[]

  • 2017: The Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (Rikken Minshuto, 立憲民主党) is formed as a centre-left social liberal party split from the Democratic Party.
  • 2018: The remaining Democratic Party merged with Kibō no Tō and form the Democratic Party for the People (Kokumin Minshutō, 国民民主党), which includes liberals and conservatives.
  • 2020: The majority faction of DPP merged into the new CDP, while the minority faction remain in the DPP.

Liberal leaders[]

  • Itagaki Taisuke
  • Yukio HatoyamaPrime Minister of Japan from 16 September 2009 to 8 June 2010, Leader of the DPJ (1999-2002, 2009-2010)
  • Naoto Kan – Prime Minister of Japan from 8 June 2010 to 2 September 2011, Leader of the DPJ (1998-1999, 2002-2004, 2010-2011)
  • Yoshihiko Noda – Prime Minister of Japan from 2 September 2011 to 26 December 2012, Leader of the DPJ (2011-2012)
  • Yukio Edano – Leader of the Opposition (2017-2021).

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ In Japan, American-style (left-)"liberal" is often referred to as "リベラル" in Katakana.[1] When referring to "liberalism" both (Including both left and right sides) liberalism in an academic sense is often referred to as "自由主義" in Kanji.

References[]

  1. ^ "今さら聞けない?! 「保守」「リベラル」ってなんだ?" [Can't you ask about them now ?! What are "conservative" and "liberal"?] (in Japanese). Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  2. ^ Brasor, Philip (21 October 2017). "Identifying the 'liberal' in Japanese politics". The Japan Times. Retrieved 26 October 2017.
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