Jin Matsubara | |
Native Name Lang: | ja |
Term Start: | 13 January 2012 |
Term End: | 1 October 2012 |
Primeminister: | Yoshihiko Noda |
Office1: | Minister for the Abduction Issue |
Term Start1: | 13 January 2012 |
Term End1: | 1 October 2012 |
Primeminister1: | Yoshihiko Noda |
Monarch1: | Akihito |
Successor1: | Keishu Tanaka |
Office2: | Member of the House of Representatives |
Term Start2: | 27 October 2024 |
Constituency2: | Tokyo 26th district |
Office3: | Member of the House of Representatives |
Term Start3: | 25 June 2000 |
Term End3: | 11 September 2005 |
Term Start4: | 30 August 2009 |
Term End4: | 16 November 2012 |
Term Start5: | 31 October 2021 |
Term End5: | 9 October 2024 |
Constituency5: | Tokyo 3rd district |
Office6: | Member of the House of Representatives |
Term Start6: | 16 December 2012 |
Term End6: | 14 October 2021 |
Constituency6: | Tokyo Proportional |
Office7: | Member of Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly for Ota |
Term Start7: | 1989 |
Term End7: | 1996 |
Birth Place: | Itabashi, Tokyo, Japan |
Party: | Independent (2023–present) |
Otherparty: | LDP (Before 1994) NFP (1994–96) Sun Party (1996–98) GGP (1998) DPJ (1998–2016) DP (2016–2017) Kibō (2017–2018) Group of Independents (2018–2019) → Social Security CDP (2020–2023) Independent (2024–) |
Alma Mater: | Waseda University |
Website: | Official Website |
is a Japanese politician. He is a member of the House of Representatives in the Diet (national legislature). He was appointed Chairman of the National Public Safety Commission, Minister of State for Consumer Affairs and Food Safety and Minister for the Abduction Issue. Matsubara was formerly affiliated with Party of Hope and the Democratic Party (the Democratic Party of Japan).
In the first cabinet reshuffle of Democratic Party Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda on 13 January 2012 he was appointed Chairman of the National Public Safety Commission, Minister of State for Consumer Affairs and Food Safety and Minister for the Abduction Issue.[1] He left the cabinet on the 1 October 2012 cabinet reshuffle. Tadamasa Kodaira replaced him as Chairman of the National Public Safety Commission and Minister of State for Consumer Affairs and Food Safety, and Keishu Tanaka took over as Minister for the Abduction Issue.[2]
Matsubara is married with three children.[3] His oldest son Hajime Matsubara is a member of the Ota city assembly.[4]
He was a supporter of right-wing filmmaker Satoru Mizushima's 2007 denialist film The Truth about Nanjing, which denied that the Nanjing Massacre ever occurred.[5] In 2014 he refused to retract his comments denying the massacre.[6]
During Diet discussions of Japanese government efforts to clean up chemical weapons abandoned in China at the end of the Second World War, Matsubara questioned the existence of such weapons.[7]
On Monday 27 August 2012 Matsubara told a House of Councillors budget committee meeting that he may propose to other ministers a review of the 1993 statement by then Chief Cabinet Secretary Yōhei Kōno admitting the Imperial Japanese Army's role in establishing and running "comfort stations" for troops with forcibly recruited comfort women, because "no direct descriptions of forcible recruitment have been found in military and other Japanese official records obtained by the government."[8]
On 15 August 2012 Matsubara, along with Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism Yuichiro Hata became the first cabinet ministers of the DPJ to openly visit the controversial Yasukuni Shrine on 15 August since the party came to power in 2009. Matsubara made his visit to commemorate the 67th anniversary of the end of World War II despite requests from South Korea to refrain from doing so,[9] and despite Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda requesting his cabinet not to do so.[10]