Kagoshima 2nd district explained

Kagoshima 2nd District
Type:Parliamentary
Parl Name:Japanese House of Representatives
District Label:Prefecture
District:Kagoshima
Region Label:Proportional District
Region:Kyushu
Electorate:334,582 (as of September 2022)[1]
Year:1994
Seats:One
Party:Indep.
Member Label:Representative
Member:Satoshi Mitazono

is a single-member electoral district of the House of Representatives, the lower house of the National Diet of Japan. The district covers two different parts of Kagoshima Prefecture. On the main island of Kyushu, it covers most of the Satsuma Peninsula; this includes the cities of Makurazaki, Ibusuki, Minamisatsuma, and Minamikyūshū, as well as the former municipalities Taniyama City and Kiire Town, which are now a part of the capital Kagoshima City. The district also includes Ōshima Subprefecture, which covers the Amami Islands more than 300km (200miles) to the south, which includes the city of Amami. In 2021, the district had 337,660 eligible voters.[2]

From 2000 to 2014, the district was represented by the Tokuda family, which runs the Tokushūkai hospital group. A political funds scandal in 2013 over donations from Tokushūkai led to the resignations of Tokyo governor Naoki Inose and Representative Takeshi Tokuda. The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) still managed to hold the district until 2021, when it was won by former Governor of Kagoshima Prefecture Satoshi Mitazono, who ran as an independent candidate.

List of representatives

RepresentativePartyDatesNotes
bgcolor= LDP1996–2000
Torao Tokudabgcolor=Liberal League2000–2005Re-elected at the 2003 general election
Takeshi Tokudabgcolor=Independent2005–2009Joined the LDP in 2006
bgcolor= LDP2009–2014Resigned from his seat in February 2014
bgcolor= LDP2014–2021Won April 2014 by-election and re-elected in 2014 general election
Satoshi Mitazonobgcolor=Independent2021–

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 総務省|令和4年9月1日現在選挙人名簿及び在外選挙人名簿登録者数. 2023-01-04. ja. Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications - Number of registered voters as of 1 September 2022.
  2. [Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications]