Kyoto Prefectural Assembly | |
Native Name: | 京都府議会 |
Native Name Lang: | ja |
Coa Pic: | Emblem of Kyoto Prefecture.svg |
Coa Res: | 150px |
House Type: | Unicameral |
Leader1 Type: | Chairman |
Leader1: | Hideo Tanaka |
Leader2 Type: | Vice Chairman |
Leader2: | Takeshi Maenami |
Members: | 60 |
Structure1: | File: Kyoto-fughikai-20160418.svg |
Structure1 Res: | 270px |
Political Groups1: | Government (48)Opposition (12) |
Last Election1: | 7 April 2019 |
Session Room: | Building of Kyoto Prefectural Assembly.JPG |
The is the prefectural parliament of Kyoto Prefecture.
Kyoto Prefecture is a stronghold of the Japanese Communist Party, which continued with the revolutionary government of Torazō Ninagawa over the seventh term over 28 years. The two-person district was called the "co-reserved seat" (the Kyoto at-large district was also called that).[1]
In the 2007 Kyoto Prefectural Assembly election, the Democratic candidate defeated the Liberal Democratic Party candidate in the one-person constituency of Ayabe, Kyoto, and made a breakthrough in the second party. For this reason, for a period of time, the composition of Kyoto's own "Community vs. Anti-Community" was becoming "Land vs. Democracy vs. Communism". The Communist Party moved up to the second party with three more seats, such as the first elected winner in Yawata City in the two-member district.[2]
Constituency | No. of people | Members | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kita-ku | 3 | Yoshiyuki Hamada Toshiki Hirai Yūichi Kishimoto | [3] | |
Kamigyō-ku | 2 | Yukiko Miyashita Yūji Sako | [4] | |
Sakyō-ku | 3 | Chiharu Kitaoka Munehisa Ishida Atsuhiro Mitsunaga | [5] | |
Nakagyō-ku | 3 | Yoshiteru Aoki Kan Harada Kenji Tanaka | [6] | |
Higashiyama-ku | 1 | Ryūzō Aramaki | [7] | |
Yamashina-ku | 3 | Masaki Hayashi Hideki Kajiwara Hiroshi Sugaya | [8] | |
Shimogyō-ku | 2 | Mitsuji Komaki Ikuko Nishiwaki | [9] | |
Minami-ku | 3 | Kōji Akita Yoshihiro Kokaji Yoshiko Yamauchi | [10] | |
Ukyō-ku | 5 | Junji Kitahara Mitsu Morooka Shinji Ninoyu Kazunori Okamoto Keiko Shimada | [11] | |
Nishikyō-ku | 3 | Kunie Hatamoto Eitarō Kondō Mariko Narumiya | [12] | |
Fushimi-ku | 6 | Kōhei Baba Kiyoyuki Kamikura Takeshi Maenami Nobuhide Nishiyama Kuniko Watanabe Masaru Yamaguchi | [13] | |
Fukuchiyama | 2 | Masaru Iemoto Shigenori Inoue | [14] | |
Maizuru | 2 | Masayoshi Ikeda Mai Ohara | [15] | |
Ayabe | 1 | Kentarō Shikata | [16] | |
Uji and Kuse-gun | 5 | Yukiko Fujiyama Osamu Mizutani Hiroshi Murai Toyohisa Ogihara Mikiko Tanaka | [17] | |
Jōyō | 2 | Tsuneo Sakai Hiromichi Sonosaki | [18] | |
Miyazu and Yoza-gun | 1 | Takefumi Nakashima | [19] | |
Kameoka | 2 | Masataka Nakamura Hideo Tanaka | [20] | |
Mukō | 1 | Masaru Isono | [21] | |
Nagaokakyō and Otokuni-gun | 2 | Masahiro Nose Junta Tsutsumi | [22] | |
Yawata | 2 | Yoshimi Morishita Yoshimitsu Tajima | [23] | |
Kyōtanabe and Tsuzuki-gun | 2 | Yoshitaka Furubayashi Takashi Kitagawa | [24] | |
Kyōtango | 1 | Tōru Moriguchi | [25] | |
Nantan and Funai-gun | 1 | Seiji Katayama | [26] | |
Kizugawa and Sōraku-gun | 2 | Kazuhisa Umoto Atsuji Yamamoto | [27] |