Hiroshi Minami (politician) explained

Minami Hiroshi
Native Name:南 弘
Native Name Lang:ja
Office:Governor General of Taiwan
Primeminister:Inukai Tsuyoshi
Term Start:2 March 1932
Term End:26 May 1932
Predecessor:Ōta Masahiro
Successor:Nakagawa Kenzō
Primeminister2:Saitō Makoto
Term Start2:26 May 1932
Term End2:8 July 1934
Predecessor2:Chūzō Mitsuji
Successor2:Tokonami Takejirō
Office3:Chief Cabinet Secretary
Primeminister3:Saionji Kinmochi
Term Start3:30 August 1911
Term End3:21 December 1912
Predecessor3:Shibata Kamon
Successor3:Egi Tasuku
Birth Date:13 November 1869
Birth Place:Himi, Toyama, Japan
Nationality:Japanese
Party:Rikken Seiyūkai

was a Japanese bureaucrat, politician and cabinet minister in Taishō and early Shōwa period Japan.

Early life

Minami was born as Iwama Tetsuro, the younger son of a wealthy farming family in Himi, Toyama, who had served for three generations in the Toyama prefectural assembly. He graduated from Tokyo Imperial University with a legal degree and passed his civil service examinations in 1896. Afterwards, he married the eldest daughter of Minami Heikichi, the chairman of the Toyama Prefectural Assembly, and changed his name to Minami Hiroshi.

After serving in several posts within the Prime Minister's office and the Home Ministry, Minami was appointed Chief Cabinet Secretary under the 1st Saionji administration in 1908, and served in that post again from 1911 to 1912. In December 1912, he was appointed to a seat in the House of Peers. From 1913 to 1914, he was appointed governor of Fukuoka Prefecture. In 1918, he was appointed Undersecretary for Education.

On 2 March 1932, Minami became Governor-General of Taiwan,[1] but served in that post for less than three months before being replaced on 26 May, following the May 15 Incident to become Communications Minister in the Saito administration. He was the first cabinet minister to have been appointed from Toyama Prefecture, and served in this post for two years and two months.

In 1937, Minami proposed that a new cabinet-level ministry be created, separating out the health care and social insurance / pensions portions of the Home Ministry. This “Ministry of Welfare” (the predecessor of the modern Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare) was realized in 1938, and Minami is credited with coining the kanji used in its name.

In 1943, Minami served as chairman of the National Language Council, a government body established to standardize the Tōyō kanji and Modern kana usage to simplify education.[2] He was also a member of the Privy Council, where he earned the enmity of the military by his outspoken remarks against Japanese militarism.

Minami died of carbon monoxide poisoning on 8 February 1946 while in the middle of a meeting.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hui Yi, Caroline Tsai. Taiwan in Japan's Empire-Building: An Institutional Approach to Colonial Engineering. Routledges. 2009. 978-0415447386. page 250
  2. Book: Gotlieb, Nanette. Kanji Politics: Language Policy and Japanese Script. Routledge. 1995. 0710305125. page 250