Kazuhiro Haraguchi | |
Native Name Lang: | ja |
Office: | Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications |
Primeminister: | Yukio Hatoyama Naoto Kan |
Term Start: | 16 September 2009 |
Term End: | 17 September 2010 |
Predecessor: | Tsutomu Sato |
Successor: | Yoshihiro Katayama |
Office1: | Member of the House of Representatives |
Term Start1: | 21 October 1996 |
Constituency1: | Saga-1st |
Birth Date: | 2 July 1959 |
Birth Place: | Saga, Japan |
Party: | CDP |
Otherparty: | DP (2016–2018, merger) DPJ (1998–2016, merger) NFP (1996–1998) Independent (1993–1996) LDP (before 1993) |
Alma Mater: | University of Tokyo |
is a Japanese politician of the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan and a member of the House of Representatives in the Diet (national legislature).
A native of Saga, Saga and graduate of the University of Tokyo, he was elected to the assembly of Saga Prefecture (District #1) for the first time in 1987 as a member of the Liberal Democratic Party, serving there for two times. In 1996 he was elected to the House of Representatives from Saga's 1st district for the first time as a member of the New Frontier Party (Shinshinto) after running unsuccessfully in 1993 as an independent. He switched to the DPJ in 1998. He was Minister of Internal Affairs from 2009 to 2010, in Yukio Hatoyama and Naoto Kan's Cabinets.
Haraguchi studied Psychology at the University of Tokyo and attended the Matsushita Institute of Government and Management. He often appears on television in which he discusses tax, pension, and decentralization issues.[1]
In the 2012 general election Haraguchi lost his single-seat electorate but retained a seat in the diet through the proportional representation system.[2] He regained his seat in the 2014 election.
Haraguchi is affiliated to the openly revisionist lobby Nippon Kaigi,[3] and a member of the association of parliamentarians promoting visits to the controversial Yasukuni shrine"[4]
Haraguchi gave the following answers to the questionnaire submitted by Mainichi to parliamentarians in 2012:[5]
Haraguchi mentioned support for Ukraine in a YouTube video and said, "Japan is behind the neo-Nazi regime." The Ukrainian Embassy in Japan protested Haraguchi's remarks on X. Haraguchi explained, "The intention was that Russia was telling us that we were behind the neo-Nazi regime," and the Constitutional Democratic Party to which Haraguchi belongs warned him verbally.[6]
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