Hosokawa_Morihiro

Morihiro Hosokawa

Morihiro Hosokawa

Prime Minister of Japan from 1993 to 1994


Morihiro Hosokawa (細川 護煕, Hosokawa Morihiro, born 14 January 1938) is a Japanese politician who was Prime Minister of Japan from 1993 to 1994, leading a coalition government which was the first non-Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) government of Japan since 1955. After successfully implementing various election and trade reforms, he stepped down from the role of Prime Minister in early 1994.[1] He later ran unsuccessfully as a candidate for Governor of Tokyo in the February 2014 gubernatorial election as an independent supported by the Democratic Party of Japan.[2] He has been, since 2005, the head of the Kumamoto-Hosokawa clan, one of the former noble families of Japan.

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Early life

Morihiro Hosokawa was born in Tokyo as the eldest grandson of Moritatsu, 3rd Marquess Hosokawa, and head of the Hosokawa clan. His maternal grandfather is the former prime minister Prince Fumimaro Konoe (1937-39, 1940-41).[3] As a great-great-grandson of Prince Kuni Asahiko, he is a third cousin of the present emperor, Naruhito.[4] He is also a descendant of Christian heroine Gracia Hosokawa.[5]

Hosokawa received his LL.B. degree from Sophia University in 1961. After working for the newspaper Asahi Shimbun as journalist for five years, he made an unsuccessful run in the 1969 general election. He was elected to the House of Councillors of Japan as an LDP representative of Kumamoto Prefecture in 1971, with his campaign funded by party boss Kakuei Tanaka.[3]

After serving two terms in the National Diet, he left in 1983 to become the governor of Kumamoto, where he served until 1991. During his term as governor, he complained about the powerful bureaucracy of the central government. Hosokawa pursued an aggressive economic policy and strengthened environmental laws.[6] In May 1992, an ongoing campaign contribution scandal inspired him to form the reformist Japan New Party (JNP), which won four seats (one of which Hosokawa assumed) in the 1992 House of Councillors election.[3]

Prime minister

Morihiro Hosokawa (at the United Nations General Assembly on September 27, 1993)

In the July 1993 general election, in a change very few had foreseen even a year earlier, the LDP lost its majority in the Diet for the first time in thirty-eight years, winning only 223 out of 511 seats in the House of Representatives. The previous LDP government of Kiichi Miyazawa was replaced by an eight-party coalition government which promised a series of social, political, and economic reforms. Excluding the JCP, the coalition was backed by all of the former opposition parties, which included the newly formed JNP, the Japan Socialist Party, the Japan Renewal Party (Shinseito), Komeito, the Democratic Socialist Party, the Socialist Democratic Federation, the RENGO and the New Party Sakigake, who together controlled 243 seats in the House of Representatives. Hosokawa, one of the major voices in forming the coalition, was chosen as the new Prime Minister.

Walter Mondale, then the US ambassador to Japan, characterized Hosokawa as having a "Kennedy-esque" ability to focus on ideals; nonetheless, Hosokawa's coalition had no common ideas other than their opposition to the LDP, which undermined Hosokawa throughout his term as prime minister. He was also at odds with Japan's bureaucracy, which he sought to reform after decades of bureaucratic entrenchment under the LDP.[7]

Foreign policy

with Boris Yeltsin, Hirohisa Fujii and Masayoshi Takemura (in Tōkyō on October, 1993)
with Bill Clinton (at APEC on November, 1993)

Hosokawa made several unprecedented moves toward atonement with Japan's Asian neighbors during his term as prime minister. In his first news conference in office, he made an unprecedented statement acknowledging that Japan waged a war of aggression in World War II.

Hosokawa later said: "You can obviously define 'aggression' in any number of ways, depending on context. But if you have any common sense, you just cannot say in good conscience that Japan was not the aggressor when Japan did in fact cause tremendous anguish and loss of life in China, Korea and Southeast Asian nations in order to protect its own interests. I knew my opinion was going to invite heated controversy."[8]

On 6 November 1993, he visited South Korea, where he had a summit with President Kim Young-sam in Gyeongju and again offered a clear apology to the Korean people for Japan's actions in the war, statements which were widely applauded in Korea. Hosokawa viewed the Japanese annexation of Korea as wrong and rejected the right-wing view in Japan that it was with Korea's consent and was beneficial to Korea.[8] On 19 March 1994, he visited China, and the two governments signed an agreement of cooperation in environmental protection.

In May 1994, right-wing extremist Masakatsu Nozoe fired a gunshot into the ceiling of a Tokyo hotel where Hosokawa was giving a speech, in apparent protest at Hosokawa's statements.[9]

Hosokawa's acts toward China and Korea inspired Russian president Boris Yeltsin to apologize to Hosokawa for the Soviet detention of Japanese prisoners of war in Siberia. Hosokawa later speculated that if both men had remained in office longer Russian-Japanese relations would have improved significantly.[8] Hosokawa also had a good personal relationship with Bill Clinton, but trade disputes between Japan and the United States dominated US-Japan relations during Hosokawa's tenure.[7]

Domestic policy

The Hosokawa government pushed for changes to Japanese election laws intended to fight political corruption, including elimination of corporate political donations to individual candidates and a redrawing of the electoral system, both intended to prevent the LDP from continuing to employ its past electoral practices. After an extended legislative fight, the LDP was able to force several concessions to maintain their advantage, retaining corporate political donations with a cap, while pushing back on some more radical changes to the electoral map and ensuring that most candidates would keep essentially the same seats in the next election.[10] These compromises had a negative impact on the public approval of the Hosokawa coalition.[11]

A law of December 1993 amending the Basic Law on measures for physically and mentally disabled persons of 1970 aimed to promote the independence of disabled people and their participation in activities in any field such as culture, the economy, and community affairs. Amendments made to regulations under the Industrial Safety and Health Law of 1972 on 30 March 1994 included accidents involving the collapsing of cranes and breaking of wires that needed to be reported to the authorities.[12] On 1 April 1994, a 40-hour workweek was introduced.[13]

Hosokawa also enacted cuts in income and resident taxes, intended to help Japan out of the recession that had followed the Japanese asset price bubble of the late 1980s and early 1990s. After pressure from the finance ministry, the government compensated for these cuts by announcing an increase in the consumption tax from 3% to 7%, effective from 1997. The move was controversial within the cabinet, as Ichiro Ozawa favored a 10% rate while the Japan Socialist Party would not agree to an increase. Hosokawa announced the increase but retracted the announcement the next day, leaving the tax at 3%. The government's response to the issue weakened its hold on power and was said to hasten its demise. The tax was eventually increased to 5% in 1997 by LDP Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto.[14][15][16]

Resignation

Hosokawa was forced to resign in April 1994 after it came to light that he had accepted a 100-million-yen loan from a trucking company previously accused of bribery and links to organized crime. Amid allegations of bribery, Hosokawa argued that the money was a loan and produced a receipt to show that he had paid it back; LDP members passed around a copy remarking that it looked like a fake.[citation needed] Although Hosokawa still had high public approval at the time, opinion was growing that he could not meet the expectations set at the start of his term.[17]

Hosokawa's resignation was abrupt and led to a number of frenzied meetings aimed at saving the coalition, which was torn between the rival camps of Ichiro Ozawa and Masayoshi Takemura.[18] After his resignation, the coalition was taken over by the Shinseito president Tsutomu Hata.

Cabinet

The Hosokawa cabinet was a product of his multi-party coalition but was dominated by individuals viewed as conservatives. Its key ministers were members of the Shinseito party led by Ichiro Ozawa. Hosokawa's own Japan New Party had no other representatives in the cabinet.[19]

with the Ministers of Hosokawa Government (at the garden of the Prime Minister's Official Residence on 9 August 1993)
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Later political life

Hosokawa joined the New Frontier Party in 1994 but, following further disputes with Ichiro Ozawa, left in 1997 with four other legislators who formed the short-lived From Five party. In 1998, From Five merged into the Good Governance Party, which itself merged into the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) later that year.

After the LDP returned to power in 1994, Hosokawa teamed up with Junichiro Koizumi of the LDP and Shusei Tanaka of New Party Sakigake in a strategic dialogue across party lines regarding Japan becoming a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council. Although this idea was not popular within the LDP and never came to fruition, Hosokawa and Koizumi maintained a close working relationship in subsequent years. Hosokawa tacitly served as Koizumi's personal envoy to China at times of strained Sino-Japanese relations during Koizumi's term as prime minister from 2001 to 2006.[20]

Hosokawa retired from politics in 1998 at the age of 60. In his retirement, he took up pottery, studying intensively for 18 months under pottery master Shiro Tsujimura.[21] Hosokawa's pottery has been exhibited in Japan and Europe.[22] He uses his pottery for tea ceremonies at a tea house originally constructed for a visit by Jacques Chirac, which was cancelled due to the outbreak of the Iraq War.[23] He is also a special consultant to The Japan Times. Upon his father's death in 2005, Hosokawa succeeded him as the head of the Hosokawa family.

Tokyo gubernatorial bid

Hosokawa campaigning (at Takadanobaba Station on February 7, 2014)

In 2014, at the age of 75, Hosokawa was approached by the DPJ to run in the Tokyo gubernatorial election. Although Hosokawa initially turned down their request, former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi encouraged him to run for the primary purpose of gathering public opposition to Prime Minister Shinzō Abe's pro-nuclear policies, and Hosokawa again considered running for the office. This was initially perceived as a blow to Yōichi Masuzoe, the LDP-supported candidate who was also supported by elements within the DPJ and who had previously been considered the lone front-runner in the race;[24] the race between Masuzoe and Hosokawa became widely dubbed as a "proxy contest" between Abe and Koizumi.[25]

Hosokawa announced his candidacy alongside Koizumi on January 14.[26] His campaign was supported by several key members of his 1993-94 coalition: Banri Kaieda and Ichirō Ozawa, who had since become the heads of the Democratic Party of Japan and People's Life Party respectively, threw their support behind Hosokawa, while Shusei Tanaka and Yoriko Madoka were enlisted as his policy advisors.[27]

During his campaign, Hosokawa criticized the Abe government's nuclear policy, stating: "Tokyo is shoving nuclear power plants and nuclear waste to other regions, while enjoying the convenience (of electricity) as a big consumer." He also criticized Abe's foreign policy in the run-up to the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, questioning "whether pugnacious diplomacy will help the festival of peace to be held smoothly."[28]

Hosokawa failed to gain momentum and trailed behind Masuzoe in the polls through the final week of the campaign, with only a 30–40% support rating within the DPJ and PLP and particularly low support among women.[29] Masuzoe was declared the winner in exit polls shortly after voting ended on February 9, but Hosokawa vowed to continue anti-nuclear advocacy.[30]

Personal life

Hosokawa lives in Yugawara, Kanagawa.[23] His wife, Kayoko Hosokawa, to whom he has been married since 23 October 1971, served as honorary chair of the Special Olympics Nippon Foundation and headed NPOs devoted to providing vaccines to children in developing nations and helping the intellectually disabled.[31] He and Kayoko have three children: Morimitsu, Satoko and Yūko.[32]

Notes

  1. Between 1947 and 1996, Hosakawa's constituency was a multi-member district elected through SNTV. After the 1994 Japanese electoral reform, mandating the abolition of all multi-member House of Representative district, Hosakawa was re-elected to the synonymous Kumamoto 1st District, which was a single-member constituency elected through FPTP, in 1996 general election. The two constituencies are fundamentally different from each other, only with their identical name.

References

  1. "JAPAN'S HOSOKAWA TO RESIGN". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2023-05-03.
  2. Yoshida, Reiji (10 January 2014). "Any Hosokawa presence in Tokyo race bad for Abe". The Japan Times. Retrieved 12 January 2014.
  3. Goozner, Merrill (30 July 1993). "A Party Rebel Will Assume Reins In Japan". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  4. "Hosokawa genealogy". Reichsarchiv (in Japanese). Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  5. "Hosokawa Morihiro | prime minister of Japan". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2017-11-30.
  6. Sanger, David (10 April 1994). "Profile in Political Descent: Japan's Once-Rising Star". New York Times. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  7. Wakamiya, Yoshibumi (4 September 2010). "Morihiro Hosokawa: Genuine nationalism includes tolerance, respect". The Asahi Shimbun. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  8. "Gunman Fires At Japanese Leader". Baltimore Sun. 31 May 1994. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  9. Goozner, Merrill (30 January 1994). "Japanese Leader Aims For Reforms Hosokawa Compromise May Delay Agenda". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  10. Braude, Jonathan (31 January 1994). "Japan starts to change". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  11. Japanese employment and labor law by Kazuo Sugeno
  12. "Fragile position: Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa". Chicago Tribune. 3 February 1994. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  13. Schlesinger, Jacob (17 June 2010). "Consumption Tax Hikes: A Short, Unhappy History". Wall Street Journal Japan Real Time. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  14. Nishiyama, George (4 July 2012). "Flashback: Ozawa's Tax-Hike Twist". Wall Street Journal Japan Real Time. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  15. Barr, Cameron (8 April 1994). "Fending Off Accusations of Impropriety, Japan Premier Faces Pressure to Resign". Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  16. "Japan's Ruling Coalition In Peril As Conservatives Boycott Meeting". Los Angeles Times. 12 April 1994. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  17. "「細川・小泉」あるか2度目の連携". 日本経済新聞. 9 January 2014. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  18. Pilling, David (13 May 2011). "Pottery with the FT: Morihiro Hosokawa". Financial Times. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  19. "都知事選リードの舛添氏 急失速を招きかねない3つの"死角"". ZAKZAK. 3 February 2014. Retrieved 7 February 2014. 事実上、「安倍vs小泉」の代理戦争といわれた都知事選だが、舛添氏を支援する自民党幹部は「何とか勝てそうだ」と顔をほころばせた。
  20. "細川元首相が出馬表明「原発問題に危機感」 会談後、小泉氏「支援する」". MSN Sankei News. 14 January 2014. Archived from the original on 14 January 2014. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  21. "細川氏出馬、旧政権メンバーが再結集 都知事選". 日本経済新聞. 11 January 2014. Retrieved 13 January 2014.
  22. Takenaka, Kiyoshi (29 January 2014). "Hosokawa questions Abe's energy policy, diplomacy". Thomson Reuters. Retrieved 3 February 2014.
  23. "Masuzoe ahead of pack in Tokyo gubernatorial race: Mainichi poll". Mainichi Shimbun. 3 February 2014. Archived from the original on 21 February 2014. Retrieved 3 February 2014.
  24. "細川氏「脱原発、争点にならなかった」 都知事選". Asahi Shimbun. 9 February 2014. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
  25. "Message from Partner: Kayoko HOSOKAWA, Director of Special Olympics Japan". Fast Retailing Co., Ltd. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  26. Who's Who in the World: 1991-1992. Marquis Who's Who. 1990. p. 491. ISBN 9780837911106.
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