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121 of the 247 seats in the House of Councillors 124 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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![]() Constituency and proportional representation (bottom right) election result | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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House of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 29 July 2001. They were the first national elections since Junichiro Koizumi became Prime Minister after Yoshiro Mori resigned in April 2001. The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and its election allies, were the major winner, provided Koizumi a strong mandates to move forward with his reform policies. The ruling coalition performed well, and regain their majority in the House of Councillors.
The electoral reform enacted in 2000 became effective for the first time. The number of Councillors per election was reduced by five, by two in the nationwide proportional representation and by one each in Okayama, Kumamoto and Miyazaki. In addition, preference voting was introduced. Instead of a party name, voters could now write the name of a single PR candidate on the ballot. The vote then counts for the party as well as the candidate; the total number of votes for a party list or its candidates determines the number of PR seats a party receives while the candidate votes determine who takes those seats for the party.
As a result of the party realignments of the 1990s, several two-member districts were represented by two Councillors from the same party before the 2001 election. Some of these Councillors lost the official nomination of their party (e.g. in Niigata), others retired (Hokkaidō, Tochigi). Most of these district split seats between ruling coalition and opposition again, in the case of both incumbents seeking re-election resulting in one of the two losing their seat (Nagano, Shizuoka).
Party | National | Constituency | Seats | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | Not up | Won | Total after | +/– | |||
Liberal Democratic Party | 21,114,727 | 38.57 | 20 | 22,299,825 | 41.04 | 44 | 46 | 64 | 110 | +8 | ||
Democratic Party of Japan | 8,990,524 | 16.42 | 8 | 10,066,552 | 18.53 | 18 | 33 | 26 | 59 | +12 | ||
New Komeito Party | 8,187,804 | 14.96 | 8 | 3,468,664 | 6.38 | 5 | 10 | 13 | 23 | +1 | ||
Japanese Communist Party | 4,329,210 | 7.91 | 4 | 5,362,958 | 9.87 | 1 | 15 | 5 | 20 | –3 | ||
Liberal Party | 4,227,148 | 7.72 | 4 | 3,011,787 | 5.54 | 2 | 2 | 6 | 8 | –4 | ||
Social Democratic Party | 3,628,635 | 6.63 | 3 | 1,874,299 | 3.45 | 0 | 5 | 3 | 8 | –5 | ||
New Conservative Party | 1,275,002 | 2.33 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 5 | New | |||||
Liberal League | 780,389 | 1.43 | 0 | 1,243,790 | 2.29 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | New | ||
Dainiin Club | 669,872 | 1.22 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | +1 | |||||
Freedom and Hope | 474,885 | 0.87 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | New | |||||
Women's Party | 469,692 | 0.86 | 0 | 732,153 | 1.35 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | New | ||
New Socialist Party of Japan | 377,013 | 0.69 | 0 | 386,966 | 0.71 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | New | ||
Assembly of Independents | 157,204 | 0.29 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | New | |||||
Ishin Seito Shimpu | 59,385 | 0.11 | 0 | 72,066 | 0.13 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | New | ||
Other parties | 160,508 | 0.30 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 5 | – | |||||
Independents | 5,658,911 | 10.41 | 3 | 5 | 3 | 8 | –18 | |||||
Total | 54,741,490 | 100.00 | 48 | 54,338,479 | 100.00 | 73 | 126 | 121 | 247 | –5 | ||
Valid votes | 54,741,490 | 95.77 | 54,338,479 | 95.10 | ||||||||
Invalid/blank votes | 2,416,629 | 4.23 | 2,800,408 | 4.90 | ||||||||
Total votes | 57,158,119 | 100.00 | 57,138,887 | 100.00 | ||||||||
Registered voters/turnout | 101,309,680 | 56.42 | 101,236,029 | 56.44 | ||||||||
Source: Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, [1] [2] Tottori Prefecture, National Diet |
The 2001 election was the first to use an open list system (非拘束名簿式) to elect proportional representation seats in the House. Under this system, voters may vote for either a political party or a specific candidate. The proportional seats are distributed among the parties by D'Hondt method according to their overall proportional votes, including candidate votes. The ranking of candidates on each party list is then determined by the candidate votes.
The results for the major parties were as follows (decimals omitted): [3] [4]
The final ranking of PR candidates and their individual vote counts were as follows:
Elected candidates in bold
Compiled from JANJAN's "The Senkyo" [5] and Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications official election results. [6]
Notes:
Party abbreviations used:
Northern Japan | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prefecture | Seats up | Incumbents | Party | Result | Candidates (Party) Vote share | |
Hokkaidō | 2 | Hisamitsu Kanno | DPJ | Incumbent re-elected Incumbent retired LDP pickup LDP gains top tōsen | Chūichi Date (LDP) 39.3% Katsuya Ogawa (DPJ) 27.2% Satoshi Miyauchi (JCP) 11.3% Masahito Nishikawa (LP) 7.8% Yoshiko Sugiyama (SDP) 6.6% Tamiko Matsumura (WP) 3.5% Mitsuhiro Yokoyama (I) 1.4% Akifumi Kumagai (LL) 1.3% Nobuyuki Saitō (NSP) 1.0% Nobuhito Sendai (Ishin) 0.5% | |
Katsuya Ogawa | DPJ | |||||
Aomori | 1 | Tsutomu Yamazaki | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Tsutomu Yamazaki (LDP) 53.7% Hideshige Sasaki (I) 18.9% Isamu Moriuchi (I) 18.8% Hiroaki Takayanagi (JCP) 6.0% Kyōko Murata (LL) 2.6% | |
Iwate | 1 | Yoshinori Takahashi | LP | Incumbent retired LP hold | Tatsuo Hirano (LP) 41.9% Tokuichirō Tamazawa (LDP) 41.1% Kazue Yabuki (SDP) 8.8% Norikatsu Sugawara (JCP) 6.1% Riki Ishiwatari (LL) 2.2% | |
Miyagi | 2 | Tomiko Okazaki | DPJ | DPJ incumbent re-elected LDP incumbent lost re-election LDP hold | Tomiko Okazaki (DPJ) 32.2% Jirō Aichi (I – LDP, Kōmeitō, CP) 27.5% Hiroaki Kameya (LDP) 25.9% Masatoshi Yoshida (SDP) 6.1% Toshirō Ono (JCP) 5.9% Kiyoharu Satō (LL) 2.3% | |
Hiroaki Kameya | LDP | |||||
Akita | 1 | Katsutoshi Kaneda | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Katsutoshi Kaneda (LDP) 54.2% Kazuo Takamatsu (DPJ) 17.9% Nagahide Sasaki (SDP) 14.6% Toshio Suzuki (JCP) 8.0% Sachiko Saitō (LL) 5.2% | |
Yamagata | 1 | Masatoshi Abe | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Masatoshi Abe (LDP) 51.5% Kanji Kimura (I) 36.1% Toshio Ōta (JCP) 6.4% Fumiyuki Monma (LL) 3.6% Tsuneyoshi Chiba (NSP) 2.4% | |
Fukushima | 2 | Toyoaki Ōta | LDP | Incumbents re-elected | Toyoaki Ōta (LDP) 40.5% Hiroko Wada (DPJ) 22.7% Kaori Kanda (I) 11.7% Keiichi Miho (I) 9.8% Masanari Kawada (LP) 7.3% Masayo Niimi (JCP) 6.2% Takao Suzuki (LL) 1.8% | |
Hiroko Wada | DPJ | |||||
Eastern and Central Japan | ||||||
Prefecture | Seats up | Incumbents | Party | Result | Candidates (Party – endorsements) Vote share | |
Ibaraki | 2 | Yasu Kanō | LDP | Incumbents re-elected | Yasu Kanō (LDP) 49.3% Moto Kobayashi (DPJ) 23.3% Masako Katō (LP) 10.4% Toyomasa Komatsu (JCP) 6.1% Mariko Yoshioka (WP) 5.7% Hiromitsu Mutō (LL) 2.8% Hiroyuki Sugimori (NSP) 2.4% | |
Moto Kobayashi | DPJ | |||||
Tochigi | 2 | Junzō Iwasaki | LDP | Incumbent re-elected Incumbent retired DPJ pickup | Masayuki Kunii (LDP) 38.6% Hiroyuki Tani (DPJ) 28.0% Toshikazu Masabuchi (I) 24.3% Setsuko Nomura (JCP) 5.5% Mayumi Yotsumoto (LL) 2.2% Morio Asai (NSP) 1.3% | |
Masayuki Kunii | LDP | |||||
Gunma | 2 | Ichita Yamamoto | LDP | Incumbents re-elected | Ichita Yamamoto (LDP) 40.4% Giichi Tsunoda (DPJ) 27.8% Mayumi Yoshikawa (LDP) 24.7% Shinmei Ogasawara (JCP) 5.1% Haruyo Tsuchiya (LL) 2.1% | |
Giichi Tsunoda | DPJ | |||||
Saitama | 3 | Hiroshi Takano | Kōmeitō | Kōmeitō and LDP incumbents re-elected LDP gains top tōsen JCP incumbent lost re-election DPJ pickup | Taizō Satō (LDP) 25.3% Hiroshi Takano (Kōmeitō) 20.2% Ryūji Yamane (DPJ) 15.1% Sachiko Abe (JCP) 13.5% Yasuko Komiyama (LP) 12.4% Chūkō Hayakawa (I) 4.5% Takeo Amatatsu (SDP) 3.9% Hiroko Hayashi (LL) 2.4% Takuya Ogawa (I) 0.9% Morio Katō (I) 0.7% Setsuo Yamaguchi (I) 0.5% Fumikazu Murata (NSP) 0.4% Masakazu Imazawa (Ishin) 0.2% | |
Taizō Satō | LDP | |||||
Sachiko Abe | JCP | |||||
Chiba | 2 | Akira Imaizumi | DPJ | Incumbents re-elected LDP gains top tōsen | Hiroyuki Kurata (LDP) 43.8% Akira Imaizumi (DPJ) 16.3% Kazumasa Okajima (LP) 15.9% Tomoko Hoshino (I) 10.1% Makoto Nakajima (JCP) 9.0% Yumiko Nakaue (LL) 3.3% Hirokuni Osanami (NSP) 1.5% | |
Hiroyuki Kurata | LDP | |||||
Tokyo | 4 | Yūichirō Uozumi | Kōmeitō | LDP and JCP incumbents re-elected Kōmeitō and SDP incumbent retired Kōmeitō hold LDP gains top tōsen DPJ pickup | Sanzō Hosaka (LDP) 27.9% Natsuo Yamaguchi (Kōmeitō) 17.5% Kan Suzuki (DPJ) 15.1% Yasuo Ogata (JCP) 12.5% Nobuhiko Endō (LP) 7.2% Kei Hata (I) 4.2% Tetsu Ueda (I) 4.2% Chizuko Koroiwa (I) 3.3% Sadaharu Hirota (SDP) 3.2% Itaru Kobayashi (LL) 2.1% Hanako Igarashi (WP) 1.8% Shigeo Arakaki (I) 0.6% Chōzō Nakagawa (I) 0.3 % Hisatoshi Hashimoto (Ishin) 0.2% Toshirō Saitō (I) 0.2% | |
Sanzō Hosaka | LDP | |||||
Yasuo Ogata | JCP | |||||
Hideo Den | SDP | |||||
Kanagawa | 3 | Akira Matsu | Kōmeitō | DPJ and Kōmeitō incumbents re-elected LDP incumbent retires LDP hold LDP gains top tōsen | Yutaka Kobayashi (LDP) 35.4% Akira Matsu (Kōmeitō) 18.0% Tsuyoshi Saitō (DPJ) 16.3% Keiko Ueda (SDP) 8.4% Masataka Ōta (LP) 8.4% Hiroyuki Muneta (JCP) 8.2% Eriko Kurata (WP) 2.2% Hirohisa Miwa (LL) 1.5% Ranko Kawamura (I) 0.8% Yoshiko Bannai (NSP) 0.4% Takeshi Miwa (Ishin) 0.4% | |
Kiyoharu Ishiawata | LDP | |||||
Tsuyoshi Saitō | DPJ | |||||
Niigata | 2 | Yoshio Yoshikawa | LDP | Incumbent retired Incumbent lost re-election LDP hold LP pickup | Kazuo Majima (LDP) 35.7% Yūko Mori (LP) 14.9% Junko Uchida (SDP) 14.2% Nobuyuki Sekiyama (DPJ) 14.2% Michio Hasegawa (I) 13.8% Kayoko Kuwahara (JCP) 6.2% Nobuaki Shinozaki (LL) 0.8% | |
Michio Hasegawa | LDP | |||||
Toyama | 1 | Yasumasa Kakuma | LDP | Incumbent retired LDP hold | Kōtarō Nogami (LDP) 65.8% Yasuharu Kusajima (I) 24.3% Hiroshi Sakamoto (JCP) 7.1% Kazue Kubokawa (LL) 2.8% | |
Ishikawa | 1 | Tetsuo Kutsukake | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Tetsuo Kutsukake (LDP) 57.0% Chieko Morioka (I) 33.3% Yōko Onishi (JCP) 6.7% Hideyuki Tanabe (LL) 2.9% | |
Fukui | 1 | Ryūji Matsumura | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Ryūji Matsumura (LDP) 63.0% Kikuko Ozawa (DPJ) 27.2% Kunihiro Uno (JCP) 7.2% Tōru Yamaguchi (LL) 2.6% | |
Yamanashi | 1 | Mahito Nakajima | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Mahito Nakajima (LDP) 48.6% Yūichi Higuchi (DPJ) 33.5% Akiko Endō (JCP) 8.0% Hiroshi Shōji (LP) 7.6% Chihoko Katō (LL) 2.3% | |
Nagano | 2 | Mineo Koyama | DPJ | Incumbent re-elected Incumbent lost re-election LDP pickup LDP gains top tōsen | Hiromi Yoshida (LDP) 32.9% Yūichirō Hata (DPJ) 27.8% Mineo Koyama (DPJ) 16.8% Norihisa Yamaguchi (JCP) 11.1% Setsuko Satō (SDP) 9.0% Nobuyuki Watanabe (LL) 2.4% | |
Yūichirō Hata | DPJ | |||||
Gifu | 2 | Tsuyako Ōno | LDP | Incumbents re-elected | Tsuyako Ōno (LDP) 55.4% Kenji Hirata (DPJ) 30.4% Takao Katō (JCP) 10.4% Michiko Higuchi (LL) 3.8% | |
Kenji Hirata | DPJ | |||||
Shizuoka | 2 | Masataka Suzuki | LDP | Incumbent re-elected Incumbent lost re-election DPJ pickup | Yutaka Takeyama (LDP) 31.7% Kazuya Shinba (DPJ) 27.5% Masataka Suzuki (LDP) 22.1% Yukihiro Shimazu (JCP) 8.3% Hiroko Suzuki (WP) 5.5% Naoko Hara (LL) 4.8% | |
Yutaka Takeyama | LDP | |||||
Aichi | 3 | Tamotsu Yamamoto | Kōmeitō | LDP and Kōmeitō incumbents re-elected LDP incumbent retired LDP gains top tōsen DPJ pickup | Seiji Suzuki (LDP) 34.6% Kōhei Ōtsuka (DPJ) 23.5% Tamotsu Yamamoto (Kōmeitō) 17.8% Aiko Saitō (JCP) 9.9% Masayuki Miyata (LP) 4.7% Hiroaki Sago (SDP) 2.9% Fusarō Sekiguchi (I) 1.5% Kiyoko Osada (LL) 1.0% Hachirō Ishikawa (LP) 0.7% Tsutomu Suzuki (I) 0.6% Reiko Yasuda (I) 0.5% Kenji Sasaki (I) 0.4% Akihiko Ishikawa (I) 0.3% Yoshiaki Yamazaki (I) 0.3% Yasuo Okayasu (NLP) 0.3% 7 other candidates 1.0% | |
Seiji Suzuki | LDP | |||||
Makiko Suehiro | LDP | |||||
Mie | 1 | Chiaki Takahashi | Independent | Incumbent re-elected | Chiaki Takahashi (I) 46.5% Kazumi Fujioka (LDP) 43.5% Miyoshi Taninaka (JCP) 7.0% Tōru Ishitani (LL) 3.1% | |
Western Japan | ||||||
Prefecture | Seats up | Incumbents | Party | Result | Candidates (Party – endorsements) Vote share | |
Shiga | 1 | Hidetoshi Yamashita | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Hidetoshi Yamashita (LDP) 55.0% Shun'yū Norikumo (DPJ) 27.9% Takaishi Kawauchi (JCP) 11.3% Midori Kitada (LL) 5.8% | |
Kyōto | 2 | Yoshihiro Nishida | LDP | LDP incumbent re-elected Independent incumbent lost re-election Democratic hold | Yoshihiro Nishida (LDP) 38.5% Kōji Matsui (DPJ) 23.5% Yōko Kawakami (JCP) 22.1% Teiko Sasano (I) 12.6% Kaori Endō (LL) 3.3% | |
Teiko Sasano | Independent | |||||
Ōsaka | 3 | Kazuyoshi Shirahama | Kōmeitō | LDP and Kōmeitō incumbents re-elected JCP incumbent lost re-election LDP gains top tōsen DPJ pickup | Shūzen Tanigawa (LDP) 26.6% Kazuyoshi Shirahama (Kōmeitō) 24.7% Takashi Yamamoto (DPJ) 17.2% Yoshiki Yamashita (JCP) 17.0% Yoshihiko Watanabe (LP) 5.6% Takahiro Kitaoka (Koizumi no Kai) 3.3% Kazuko Doi (WP) 2.9% Tomohiko Ōkawa (LL) 1.0% Keiji Kashimoto (NSP) 0.7% Kyōsuke Morimoto (I) 0.7% Ryūichi Nakatani (Ishin) 0.3% | |
Yoshiki Yamashita | JCP | |||||
Shūzen Tanigawa | LDP | |||||
Hyōgo | 2 | Ichiji Ishii | LL | LL incumbent retired LDP incumbent re-elected LDP gains top tōsen DPJ pickup | Yoshitada Kōnoike (LDP) 39.3% Yasuhiro Tsuji (DPJ) 23.7% Junko Hiramatsu (JCP) 14.3% Kunihiko Muroi (LP) 9.3% Aiko Takada (WP) 6.1% Keiji Ueno (NSP) 3.1% Toyoaki Tagawa (LL) 2.3% Shōhei Fujiki (I) 1.9% | |
Yoshitada Kōnoike | LDP | |||||
Nara | 1 | Yukihisa Yoshida | DPJ | Incumbent retired LDP pickup | Shōgo Arai (LDP) 43.9% Takeshi Maeda (DPJ) 39.2% Shōji Kamano (JCP) 8.2% Yukiko Sugita (SDP) 6.6% Yasuhiro Okai (LL) 2.2% | |
Wakayama | 1 | Hiroshige Sekō | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Hiroshige Sekō (LDP) 67.7% Fuminori Kimura (DPJ) 14.7% Yasuhisa Hara (JCP) 13.7% Toyoko Nishioka (LL) 3.9% | |
Tottori | 1 | Takayoshi Tsuneda | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Takayoshi Tsuneda (LDP) 56.5% Makoto Satō (DPJ) 22.4% Tomoko Ichitani (JCP) 10.9% Satomi Yamamoto (SDP) 7.0% Masashi Yamaguchi (LL) 3.2% | |
Shimane | 1 | Shuntarō Kageyama | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Shuntarō Kageyama (LDP) 68.1% Kazuhisa Hamaguchi (DPJ) 18.7% Katsuhiko Gotō (JCP) 9.1% Junko Nakashima (LL) 4.0% | |
Okayama | 1 | Toranosuke Katayama | LDP | 1 seat lost by reapportionment LDP incumbent re-elected DPJ incumbent lost re-election | Toranosuke Katayama (LDP) 61.0% Mie Ishida (DPJ) 28.8% Hisaki Moriwaki (JCP) 8.2% Keiko Asawa (LL) 2.0% | |
Yukihisa Yoshida | DPJ | |||||
Hiroshima | 2 | Kensei Mizote | LDP | LDP incumbent re-elected DPJ incumbent lost re-election LDP pickup | Takeaki Kashimura (I) 36.4% Kensei Mizote (LDP) 31.9% Kenji Sugekawa (DPJ) 17.0% Kimiko Kurihara (NSP) 6.5% Satoshi Fujimoto (JCP) 6.1% Hidemi Yamada (LL) 2.0% | |
Kenji Sugekawa | DPJ | |||||
Yamaguchi | 1 | Yoshimasa Hayashi | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Yoshimasa Hayashi (LDP) 61.4% Susumu Iwamoto (DPJ) 25.5% Tomoyuki Uonaga (JCP) 9.3% Tadao Sasaki (LL) 2.2% Tsuyoshi Nakashima (Ishin) 1.5% | |
Tokushima | 1 | Shūji Kitaoka | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Shūji Kitaoka (LDP) 54.3% Kiyoshi Kimura (DPJ) 31.8% Hitoshi Fujita (JCP) 7.2% Chiyoko Takagai (NSP) 5.4% Kōichi Maekawa (LL) 1.3% | |
Kagawa | 1 | Kenji Manabe | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Kenji Manabe (LDP) 62.1% Midori Nagura (I) 18.9% Yōko Shirakawa (JCP) 14.2% Mie Tanaka (LL) 4.9% | |
Ehime | 1 | Katsutsugu Sekiya | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Katsutsugu Sekiya (LDP) 61.0% Takashi Shimakawa (I) 25.8% Hisao Yamamoto (JCP) 8.4% Yoshiko Oguri (LL) 4.8% | |
Kōchi | 1 | Kōhei Tamura | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Kōhei Tamura (LDP) 40.0% Hajime Hirota (I) 30.3% Kumi Nakamura (DPJ) 16.6% Sachi Nakane (JCP) 12.1% Kiyotaka Maeda (LL) 0.9% | |
Southern Japan | ||||||
Prefecture | Seats up | Incumbents | Party | Result | Candidates (Party – endorsements) Vote share | |
Fukuoka | 2 | Kentarō Koba | Kōmeitō | Kōmeitō incumbent retired SDP incumbent lost re-election LDP pickup | Masaji Matsuyama (LDP) 30.6% Tsukasa Iwamoto (DPJ) 16.7% Chū Furukawa (I) 16.3% Shigeko Mieno (SDP) 12.7% Jun'ichirō Koga (LP) 10.3% Toyoomi Tsuno (JCP) 7.9% Yukimi Kamemoto (WP) 3.9% Miyoko Jōno (LL) 1.6% | |
Shigeko Mieno | SDP | LDP gains top tōsen DPJ pickup | ||||
Saga | 1 | Takao Jinnouchi | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Takao Jinnouchi (LDP) 65.0% Yasuhiro Fujino (DPJ) 23.2% Yasutoshi Kamimura (JCP) 7.3% Yasuhiro Fukagawa (LL) 4.5% | |
Nagasaki | 1 | Tadashi Taura | LDP | Incumbent re-elected | Tadashi Taura (LDP) 53.4% Yūji Mitsuno (I) 29.3% Kōtarō Tanaka (I) 6.9% Kimiko Ogawa (JCP) 6.6% Sachiko Matsumoto (LL) 3.8% | |
Kumamoto | 1 | Hirohide Uozumi | Independent | 1 seat lost by reapportionment Independent incumbent retired LDP incumbent re-elected | Issei Miura (LDP) 55.5% Mariko Kōyama (DPJ) 34.8% Etsuko Nishikawa (JCP) 5.4% Kazuo Misumi (LL) 2.5% Hirofumi Ishida (NSP) 1.8% | |
Issei Miura | LDP | |||||
Ōita | 1 | Keigi Kajiwara | SDP | Incumbent lost re-election LDP pickup | Hiroko Gotō (LDP) 49.4% Keigi Kajiwara (SDP) 43.4% Masami Doi (JCP) 5.2% Kayoko Kōno (LL) 2.1% | |
Miyazaki | 1 | Motoi Nagamine | LDP | Incumbent lost re-election LDP hold | Toshifumi Kosehira (LDP) 35.3% Haruo Higashi (I) 30.5% Motoi Nagamine (I) 27.5% Hiromitsu Baba (JCP) 4.1% Yutaka Kohata (LL) 2.6% | |
Kagoshima | 1 | Kaname Kamada | LDP | 1 seat lost by reapportionment Incumbents retired LDP hold | Yoshito Kajiya (LDP) 55.7% Masahiro Futamure (I) 27.9% Mitsuhiro Yanagida (I) 7.4% Haruki Yamaguchi (JCP) 4.7% Kyōko Hata (NSP) 4.2% | |
Wataru Kubo | DPJ | |||||
Okinawa | 1 | Teruya Kantoku | Independent | Incumbent lost re-election LDP pickup | Junshirō Nishime (LDP – Kōmeitō, CP) 47.7% Teruya Kantoku (I – DPJ, LP, SDP, OSMP, LL) 44.0% Sōgi Kayō (JCP) 8.3% |
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Hyogo 11th district is a constituency of the House of Representatives in the Diet of Japan. It is located in Southwestern Hyōgo and is based on the 1995 borders of the city of Himeji; the former towns of Ieshima, Yumesaki, Kōdera and Yasutomi that merged into Himeji in 2006 are part of the 12th district. As of September 2015, 387,509 eligible voters were registered in the district.
The Shikoku proportional representation block is one of eleven proportional representation (PR) "blocks", multi-member constituencies for the House of Representatives in the Diet of Japan. It consists of Shikoku region covering Tokushima, Kagawa, Ehime and Kōchi Prefectures. Following the introduction of proportional voting it elected seven representatives in the 1996 general election. When the total number of PR seats was reduced from 200 to 180, the Shikoku PR block shrank to six seats.
The Tōkyō proportional representation block, or more formally the proportional representation tier "Tokyo Metropolis electoral district", is one of eleven proportional representation (PR) "blocks", multi-member constituencies for the House of Representatives in the Diet of Japan. It consists solely of the prefecture of Tokyo making it one of two blocks covering only one prefecture, the other being Hokkaido. Following the introduction of proportional voting Tokyo elected 19 representatives by PR in the 1996 general election, and 17 since the election of 2000 when the total number of PR seats was reduced from 200 to 180.
This article presents detailed results of the 2009 Japanese general election. It lists all elected Representatives in the 300 single-member districts and the 11 regional proportional representation (PR) blocks. The top PR block replacement candidates to be elected later without vote in cases of death, resignation or disqualification (kuriage-tōsen) are also listed, by-elections are not.
The Hyogo at-large district is a constituency that represents Hyogo Prefecture in the House of Councillors in the Diet of Japan. It currently has five Councillors in the 242-member house, but this representation will increase to six by July 2019.
The Tokushima-Kochi at-large district is a constituency of the House of Councillors in the Diet of Japan. The district was formed in 2015 from a merger of the Tokushima and Kōchi at-large districts. Liberal Democratic Party member Yusuke Nakanishi was elected as its first representative at the House of Councillors election in July 2016.
The Tottori-Shimane at-large district is a constituency of the House of Councillors in the Diet of Japan. It was formed pursuant to a 2015 revision of the Public Officers Election Law from a merger of the Tottori and Shimane at-large districts, the two smallest districts in the country, to address the imbalance in representation between rural and urban voters. The district has 1,068,348 registered voters and was contested for the first time at the House of Councillors election that was held on 10 July 2016.
The Shikoku proportional representation block was one of 11 multi-member districts that were contested at the general election for the House of Representatives in the Japanese National Diet on 14 December 2014. Six seats were available for election via open party lists. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) maintained their dominance in the predominantly rural area, claiming three of the seats.
The Shikoku proportional representation block was one of 11 multi-member districts that were contested at the general election for the House of Representatives in the Japanese National Diet on 16 December 2012. Six seats were available for election via open party lists. The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) won the election in a landslide, which returned former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to power. In the Shikoku PR block, the LDP won two of the six seats with 30.7% of the vote.
This articles presents detailed results of the Japanese 2017 general election of members of the House of Representatives. It lists all elected Representatives in the 289 single-member districts and the 11 regional proportional representation (PR) blocks. Subsequent by-elections and the PR block replacement candidates to be elected later without additional vote in cases of death, resignation or disqualification (kuriage-tōsen) are not listed.
The Japanese National Proportional Representation Block, known in Japan as the House of Councillors proportional district is an electoral district for the House of Councillors, the upper house of the National Diet of Japan. It consists of the whole nation and elects 50 members per election, 100 in total, by D'Hondt method proportional representation (PR).
General elections were held in Japan on 27 October 2024 due to the early dissolution of the House of Representatives, the lower house of the National Diet, by Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba. Voting took place in all constituencies, including proportional blocks, to elect all 465 members of the House of Representatives.
House of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 10 July 2022 to elect 125 of the 248 members of the upper house of the National Diet, for a term of six years. The elected candidate with the fewest votes in the Kanagawa prefectural district will serve for three years, as the district combined its regular and byelections.