Abbreviation: | CDP or CDPJ |
Leader: | Kenta Izumi |
Leader2 Title: | Deputy Leader |
Leader2 Name: | Seiji Osaka Chinami Nishimura Kiyomi Tsujimoto |
Leader3 Title: | Secretary-General |
Leader3 Name: | Katsuya Okada |
Leader4 Title: | Chairman of the Policy Bureau |
Leader4 Name: | Akira Nagatsuma |
Founder: | Yukio Edano |
Headquarters: | 2-12-4 Fuji Building 3F, Hirakawa-chō, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 102-0093, Japan |
International: | Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats (observer) |
Country: | Japan |
Predecessor: | Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan |
Split: | Democratic Party (2016) |
Newspaper: | Rikken-minshu[1] |
Youth Wing: | RikkenYouth[2] |
Membership Year: | 2021 |
Membership: | 100,267[3] |
Colors: | Blue[4] |
Slogan: | Japanese: 人へ 未来へ まっとうな政治へ Japanese: Hitoe Miraie Mattouna Seijie[5] ("For people, for the future, for honest politics.") |
Seats1 Title: | Councillors |
Seats2 Title: | Representatives |
Seats3 Title: | Prefectural assembly members |
Seats4 Title: | Municipal assembly members[6] |
The is a liberal political party in Japan. It is the primary centre-left party in Japan,[7] and as of 2024 is the second largest party in the National Diet behind the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).[8]
It was founded in October 2017 as a split from the Democratic Party ahead of the 2017 general election.[7] In late 2020, the party was re-founded following a merger with majorities of the Democratic Party For the People and the Social Democratic Party as well as some independent lawmakers.
The party's platform supports raising the minimum wage, expanded welfare policies, the legalization of same-sex marriage, increased gender equality, multiculturalism, abortion rights,[9] renewable energy policies, decentralization, a multilateral foreign policy, the revision of the U.S.–Japan Status of Forces Agreement, tax reform and electoral reform.[10] The party strongly opposes efforts to amend the Japanese Constitution to reinterpret Article 9 or codify the status of the Japan Self-Defense Forces and also opposes nuclear power.
The party was formed in the run up to the 2017 general election from a split of the centre-left wing of the opposition Democratic Party (DP).[11] [12] [13] [14] Prior to the election on 28 September 2017, the DP House of Representatives caucus dissolved in order for party members to stand as candidates for Tokyo governor Yuriko Koike's Party of Hope or as independents in the upcoming election.[15]
The new party was launched on 2 October 2017 by DP deputy leader Yukio Edano at a press conference in Tokyo for liberals and left-leaning members of the DP who do not wish to, or were rejected for, contesting the election as candidates for the Party of Hope.[16] [17]
On 3 October 2017, it was announced that the new party would not contest seats where former Democrats were running as Party of Hope candidates,[18] a gesture which was not returned when the Party of Hope ran a candidate in Edano's incumbent district. The Japanese Communist Party (JCP), in turn, pulled their own candidate from running in Edano's district so as to not take away votes from him.[19] The party won a total of 55 seats, becoming the leading opposition party and leading the pacifist bloc (including the JCP and Social Democratic Party) to become the largest opposition bloc.
In July 2020, the CDP became an observer affiliate of the Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats.[20]
On 19 August 2020, the CDP announced that it would merge with the majority of the Democratic Party For the People (DPP) as well as some independent Diet members in September of that year.[21]
On 10 September 2020, the new party elected Edano as leader and voted to retain the CDP name.[22] Following the merger, the new CDP had 149 members and held 107 seats in the House of Representatives, compared to 156 members and 96 seats held by the Democratic Party in 2016. The independents who joined the CDP in this merger included former Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda. Several conservative DPP members, including DPP president Yuichiro Tamaki, did not join the CDP and instead continued to lead a rump DPP independent of the CDP.[23]
On 14 November 2020, the Social Democratic Party (SDP) voted to agree to a merger arrangement with the CDP, allowing SDP members to leave the party and join the CDP.[24] SDP leader Mizuho Fukushima was opposed to the merger agreement and as a result remained in the Social Democratic Party.[24]
The CDP contested the 2021 general election in an electoral pact co-operating with the JCP, Reiwa Shinsengumi and continuing DPP and SDP parties in fielding single opposition candidates in single-seat constituencies.[25] Edano resigned as party leader following the election on 2 November 2021, due to poorer than expected electoral results, in which the CDP fell from 110 to 96 seats.[26] [27]
Kenta Izumi was elected as the leader of the CDP in the 2021 Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan leadership election on 30 November 2021. Formerly a member of the DPP, he said that the two parties are regarded by the public as "close" and "thought to be like brothers" and "expressed support for a tie-up" between the two.
The CDP has been described as liberal[28] and social-liberal,[29] and in favour of constitutionalism.[30] The party has also been described as progressive,[31] [32] left-wing populist,[33] and centre-left,[13] [12] [34] and following its enlargement in 2020 has variously been described as liberal,[23] centrist, or centre-left.[7] [35] Within the CDP, as with its predecessor the Democratic Party of Japan, there are conservative politicians, as well as politicians from social-democratic backgrounds.[36] [37] [38]
At launch in 2017, the CDP opposed the proposed revision of Article 9 of Japan's postwar constitution.[13] [39] [40] The party supports the phasing out of nuclear energy in Japan,[41] and government investment in renewable energy.[42] The party does not support the legalization and maintenance of casinos. The party supports "building a society that supports each other and makes full use of individuality and creativity."[43] [44] In their 2017 political programme, the party expressed support for grassroots democracy and diplomatic pacifism.[45] The CDP has expressed negative views about the Statue of Peace and has called on the South Korean government to remove the Statue of Peace.[46]
In 2019, the party pledged to support LGBT rights and the legalization of same-sex marriage in Japan,[47] and in March 2023, promoted a parliamentary bill for Japan to legally recognise such couplings.[48]
The party supported a freeze in the increase of the consumption tax as of 2017,[49] [50] and supports a temporary consumption tax cut as of 2020, along with higher taxes on corporations and wealthy individuals. In the run-up to the 2021 general election, party leader Edano stated his party's support for redistribution of wealth.[51] The 2021 election platform offered support for progressive taxation, a pledge for additional welfare payments for citizens on low incomes, and raising the capital gains tax rate to 25% by 2023.[52]
As of February 2, 2024.[53] [54] [55] [56] [57]
Position | Name | |
---|---|---|
Leader | Kenta Izumi | |
Deputy Leader | Seiji Osaka | |
Chinami Nishimura | ||
Kiyomi Tsujimoto | ||
Secretary-General | Katsuya Okada | |
Chairman of the Policy Bureau | Akira Nagatsuma | |
Election Campaign Committee chief | Hiroshi Ogushi | |
Diet Affairs Committee chief | Jun Azumi | |
Joint House General Council chief | Ryūhei Kawada |
No. | Leader (birth–death) | Constituency | Took office | Left office | Election results | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Split from: Democratic Party (2016) | ||||||||
1 | Yukio Edano (b. 1964) | Rep for Saitama 5th | 3 October 2017 | 14 September 2020 | Abe S. | |||
Merger of: Democratic Party For the People & Some Independents Group | ||||||||
1 | Yukio Edano (b. 1964) | Rep for Saitama 5th | 15 September 2020 | 12 November 2021 | Abe S. | |||
Suga | ||||||||
Kishida | ||||||||
2 | Kenta Izumi (b. 1974) | Rep for Kyoto 3rd | 30 November 2021 | Incumbent |
+ House of Representatives | ||||||||||||
Election | Leader | No. of candidates | Seats | Position | Constituency votes | PR Block votes | Status | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | ± | Share | No. | Share | No. | Share | ||||||
2017 | Yukio Edano | 78 | 11.8% | 2nd | 4,852,097 | 8.75% | 11,084,890 | 19.88% | ||||
Merger of: Democratic Party For the People & Some Independents Group (2020) | ||||||||||||
2021 | Yukio Edano | 240 | 20.6% | 2nd | 17,215,621 | 29.96% | 11,492,095 | 20.00% |
+ House of Councillors | |||||||||||||
Election | Leader | No. of candidates | Seats | Position | Constituency votes | Party list votes | Status | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Won | ± | Share | Not up | Total | No. | Share | No. | Share | |||||
2019 | Yukio Edano | 42 | 13.7% | 15 | 2nd | 7,951,430 | 15.79% | 7,917,720 | 15.81% | ||||
Merger of: Democratic Party For the People & Some Independents Group (2020) | |||||||||||||
2022 | Kenta Izumi | 51 | 13.6% | 22 | 2nd | 8,154,330 | 15.33% | 6,771,914 | 12.77% | ||||