Reiwa Shinsengumi れいわ新選組 | |
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Co-leaders | Taro Yamamoto Akiko Oishi Mari Kushibuchi |
Founder | Taro Yamamoto |
Founded | 1 April 2019 |
Split from | Liberal Party |
Headquarters | 1F, Akasaka-Kōei Bldg. 3-2-6 Akasaka, Minato-ku, Tokyo |
Ideology | Progressivism Left-wing populism |
Political position | Left-wing[1] |
Colors | Pink[2][3] |
Slogan | 「日本を守る」とは、「あなたを守る」ことから始まる ("Nihon wo mamoru to ha anata wo mamoru kotokara hajimaru." "Protecting Japan starts with protecting you.")[4] |
Councillors | 5 / 248 |
Representatives | 3 / 465 |
Prefectural assembly members | 0 / 2,644 |
Municipal assembly members | 52 / 29,135 |
Website | |
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Reiwa Shinsengumi (Japanese: れいわ新選組) is a progressive[5][6] and left-wing populist[7][8] political party in Japan founded by actor-turned-politician Taro Yamamoto in April 2019. The party was formed by left-wing members of the Liberal Party who opposed its merger with the Democratic Party for the People.[9] The party won more than 4% of the vote after contesting the House of Councilors election in July 2019, gaining two seats only about three and a half months after the formation of the party.[10]
The party is named after the current Reiwa era and the Shinsengumi elite swordsman corps of the Bakumatsu period.
Taro Yamamoto, a member of the House of Councillors for Tokyo, founded the party on 1 April 2019. This was with the intent of standing multiple candidates, including himself, in the upcoming House of Councillors election later in the year.[9] On 10 April, Yamamoto held a press conference and announced the party's platform.[11]
The party stood multiple candidates in the 2019 House of Councillors election. The party won 2.2 million votes in the national PR block, exceeding the 2% threshold needed to be recognised as a political party, and securing two seats. Nearly one million votes were cast for Yamamoto personally; however, because the party had nominated Yasuhiko Funago and Eiko Kimura, both of whom have disabilities,[12] ahead of him in the party list, Yamamoto did not win a seat.[13] The National Diet Building was adapted to allow barrier-free access for wheelchair users.
Notable party members include university professor Ayumi Yasutomi and former deputy representative of the North Korean abduction liaison Toru Hasuike.
Yamamoto was one of the 22 candidates participating in the 2020 Tokyo gubernatorial election, coming in third place with 10.72% of the votes. The party promises included a direct cash handout programme due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[14]
Yamamoto joined with the leaders of the Constitutional Democratic Party, Japanese Communist Party, and Social Democratic Party in running a joint opposition coalition based on common policy goals.[15] Yamamoto, who had been formerly running in Tokyo's 8th district, withdrew to run in the Tokyo PR block to avoid vote splitting against the CDP's Harumi Yoshida. The withdrawal came following pushback from local residents, who were hesitant to vote for Yamamoto, a "parachute candidate," over Yoshida, who had been active within the community for many years prior.[16] The party further withdrew 7 candidates as part of the joint platform to avoid vote splitting between the opposition parties, accounting for 40% of Reiwa Shinsengumi's planned slate of candidates.[17][18]
There are 20 other candidates besides Yamamoto, running under the Reiwa Shinsengumi banner. One of them is Takashi Takai, who was expelled from the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan after ignoring COVID-19 state of emergency laws.[19] Takai is Reiwa Shinsengumi's only sitting legislator, formerly elected on the CDP list for the Chūgoku proportional representation block. Takai will be running at Shiga Prefecture's 3rd District.[20]
Yamamoto announced his resignation from the House of Representatives he was elected to in 2021 general election, and contested in Tokyo metropolitan constituency.[21] Reiwa gained three seats in the election: Yamamoto winning a seat in Tokyo, along with two other candidates who took up seats in the nationwide proportional representation block.[22][23]
Reiwa Shinsengumi has been described as progressive,[5][6] left-wing populist,[7][8] and sits on the left of the left–right political spectrum.[1] Some scholars classify the party's views as radical left-wing.[24] Eder-Ramsauer and Matsutani describe Reiwa Shinsengumi as an eclectic left-wing populist party that blends emancipate radical democratic politics with an openness to communitarian ideas against neoliberals.[25] On the other hand, Axel Klein who takes an ideational approach, writes that the party does not meet the criteria that define (left) populism.[26]
The party is variously described as being anti-austerity, anti-establishment,[8][27][28] and anti-nuclear power[29] as well as supporting animal welfare,[29] minority rights,[29][30] and economic interventionism.[31] The party is sometimes considered a "liberal-populist" party,[32] and the main supporters of this party are also left-liberals.[33][34]
In a press conference held shortly after the founding of the party in 2019, Yamamoto announced that his party would push for the abolition of the consumption tax and instead, make the corporation tax a progressive tax and increase government bonds.[35] In addition, he said that the party is against the construction of the Henoko base. In 2019 the party also said it would: ban nuclear power entirely, raise the minimum wage to ¥1,500 per hour with public guarantee, implement laws protecting free education, disability rights, LGBT rights, animal rights, institute a basic income of ¥30,000 (circa $283 as of September 2020) per person per month whenever inflation is below 2% (benefits would end whenever inflation is not below the threshold and resume if it goes below again), and reinforce social services.[36]
The party has announced that it would reverse/abolish many of the laws that were revised or passed by Prime Minister Shinzō Abe if elected, including the pre-emptive anti-terrorism law such as martial law State Secrecy Law and the 2015 Japanese military legislation.[citation needed]
No. | Name (Birth–death) |
Constituency / title | Term of office | Election results | Image | Prime Minister (term) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Took office | Left office | |||||||
Split from: a part of Liberal Party (2016) (centre-left) | ||||||||
1 | Taro Yamamoto (b. 1974) |
Cou for Tokyo (21 July 2013 – 21 July 2019 and 25 July 2022 – present) Rep for Tokyo PR block (31 October 2021 – 15 April 2022) |
1 April 2019 | Incumbent | 2019
Unopposed 2022 |
Abe S. 2012–2020 | ||
Suga 2020–2021 | ||||||||
Kishida 2021–present |
Election | Leader | Candidates | Seats | Position | Constituency votes | PR Block votes | Government | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | ± | Share | Number | % | Number | % | |||||
2021 | Taro Yamamoto | 21 | 3 / 465
|
new | 0.6% | 7th | 248,280 | 0.43% | 2,215,648 | 3.86% | Opposition |
Election | Leader | Candidates | Seats | Nationwide | Prefecture | Status | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total | Won | Votes | % | Votes | % | ||||
2019 | Taro Yamamoto | 10 | 2 / 245
|
2 / 124
|
2,280,252 | 4.6 | 214,438 | 0.4 | Opposition |
2022 | 14 | 5 / 248
|
3 / 125
|
2,319,157 | 4.4 | 989,716 | 1.9 | Opposition |
Election | Candidate | Votes | % | Finishing place | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | Taro Yamamoto | 657,277 | 10.72 | 3rd | Lost |
Election | Leader | Votes | % | Seats |
---|---|---|---|---|
2021 | Taro Yamamoto | 37,299 | 0.80 | 0 / 127
|