Liberalism in Japan explained
Japanese liberalism formed in the nineteenth century as a reaction against traditional society. In the twentieth century 'liberal' gradually became a synonym for conservative, and today the main conservative party in the country is named . The defunct was considered in part a centrist-liberal party, as are most parties which derived from it. The liberal character of the is disputed, as it is also considered to be conservative by some. This article is limited to liberal parties with substantial support, proved by having had representation in parliament.
Modern Japanese liberalism
Liberals in Japan are generally considered united by one major factor: their opposition to changing the post-World War II constitution forbidding the creation of a national military.[1]
Before the 1990s, Japanese liberals did not form a prominent individual political party.
Since the 1990s, most conservative liberals have left the LDP. The Japan New Party (JNP) and New Party Sakigake are the parties founded by Japanese conservative-liberals against the LDP's nationalist project, which lead to the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ)-liberalism tradition. Japan's previous liberal party, the DPJ, was led by moderates of both the right-wing LDP and left-wing JSP.
Currently, the LDP has not been considered a liberal party. In the past, liberals in the LDP became opposition forces after leaving the party, so "liberal" generally became a force against "conservative" in Japanese politics in the 21st century. The current DPJ-liberalism tradition is being continued by the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan (CDPJ).[6]
Since Japanese conservatism was influenced by Shinto, Japan's radical liberalism and democratic socialism were more influenced by Christianity.[7]
As the LDP becomes an increasingly solid conservative party, and the socialist movement that led the traditional anti-LDP camp has lost control in Japan's opposition political camp, gradually shifting from the centre-right "liberal" in the European and Australian sense of the past to the centre-left "liberal" in the American sense. Currently, the LDP is the largest conservative party in Japan, and the CDPJ is the largest liberal party in Japan.
Timeline
The sign ⇒ means a reference to another party in that scheme. For inclusion in this scheme it isn't necessary that parties labelled themselves "liberal".
From Public Party of Patriots until Constitutional Party
- 1874: Liberals founded the
- 1881: The Aikoku Kōtō is continued by the
- 1891: The Jiyūtō is renamed into
- 1898: The Rikken Jiyūtō merged with the ⇒ Shimpotō into the
- 1898: A faction seceded as the ⇒ Kensei Hontō; with the former Jiyūtō faction reorganizing itself into the New Kenseitō
- 1900: The party is taken over by the oligarchy and renamed into
From Constitutional Reform Party to Reform Club
- 1882: The is formed
- 1896: The party is continued by the
- 1898: The party merged into the ⇒ Kenseitō
- 1898: The Kenseitō fell apart and a faction formed the, renamed in 1910 into the
- 1913: A faction seceded as the ⇒ Rikken Dōshikai
- 1922: The Rikken Kokumintō is renamed
- 1920s: The Kakushin Club merged into the Rikken Seiyūkai
From Association of Friends of the Constitution to Constitutional Democratic Party
- 1913: A faction of the ⇒ Rikken Kokumintō formed the, renamed in 1916
- 1927: The Kenseikai merged with the ⇒ Seiyūhontō into the
- 1940: The party is dissolved by the military junta
Orthodox Constitutional Friends Party
- 1924: A faction of the Rikken Seiyūkai formed the
- 1927: The party merged into the ⇒ Rikken Minseitō
Postwar period
In postwar Japan, liberal (リベラル) tendencies did not stand out much among major political parties for more than 40 years. During the Japanese Empire, liberals, including the Constitutional Democratic Party, were swept away by several political parties. The center-right liberal-conservatives (自由保守主義) became the 'leftist faction' of the right-wing conservative Liberal Democratic Party, and the center-left progressive-liberals (革新自由主義) formed the 'rightist faction' within the left-wing Socialist Party.
From Renewal Party to Liberal Party
- 1993: A liberal faction of the conservative seceded as the
- 1994: The Renewal Party merged with other factions into the
- 1997: The New Frontier Party fell apart into many parties, among them since 1998 the, but also the, the and the
- 2000: Dissidents of the Liberal Party formed the
- 2003: The Liberal Party merged into the ⇒ Democratic Party of Japan
- 2012: split from the Democratic Party of Japan
- 2012: People's Life First split into a new Liberal Party and
- 2013: Tomorrow Party of Japan dissolved
- 2019: Liberal Party merged into ⇒ Democratic Party for the People
New Harbinger Party
- 1993: A liberal faction of the conservative seceded as the
- 1996: Most members left to co-found the ⇒ Democratic Party of Japan
- 1998: The remainder of the party evolved in conservative direction and renamed itself as, before becoming the ecologist in 2002
Democratic Party of Japan (1998–2016)
- 1996: Dissidents from the ⇒ New Harbinger Party and the Social Democratic Party founded the
- 1998: The party merged with the Good Governance Party, the New Fraternity Party and the Democratic Reform Party to form a new, enlarged
- 2003: The ⇒ Liberal Party (1998) merged into the party
- 2016: The Democratic Party of Japan merged with Japan Innovation Party and Vision of Reform to form the
CDP and DPP (2017–present)
- 2017: The is formed as a centre-left social liberal party split from the Democratic Party.
- 2018: The remaining Democratic Party merged with Kibō no Tō to form the, which includes liberals and conservatives.
- 2020: The majority faction of DPP merged into the new CDP, while the minority faction remain in the DPP.
Liberal leaders
- Yukio Hatoyama – Prime Minister of Japan from 16 September 2009 to 8 June 2010, Leader of the DPJ (1999–2002, 2009–2010)
- Naoto Kan – Prime Minister of Japan from 8 June 2010 to 2 September 2011, Leader of the DPJ (1998–1999, 2002–2004, 2010–2011)
- Yoshihiko Noda – Prime Minister of Japan from 2 September 2011 to 26 December 2012, Leader of the DPJ (2011–2012)
- Yukio Edano – Leader of the Opposition (2017–2021).
- Kenta Izumi – Leader of the Opposition (2021–).
Liberal thinkers
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: Brasor. Philip. Identifying the 'liberal' in Japanese politics. The Japan Times. 26 October 2017. 21 October 2017.
- Book: Arthur Stockwin . Kweku Ampiah . Rethinking Japan: The Politics of Contested Nationalism . ... of the debate is the left/liberal “peace movement” currently led by Japanese academics, including legal scholars, and more recently by students, but which until the end of the Cold War was spearheaded by the Japan Socialist Party. . 2017 . 196 . . 9781498537933 .
- Book: Tetsuya Kataoka . Creating Single-party Democracy: Japan's Postwar Political System . The constitution was defended by the JSP, the mainstay of kakushin (radical-liberal forces), ... . 1992 . 2 . Hoover Institution Press . 9780817991111 .
- Book: Tetsuya Kobayashi. Society, Schools, and Progress in Japan. 1976. Elsevier Science. 978-1483136226. 68.
- Book: Japan Almanac . In the House of Representatives, the Liberal-Democratic Party, guided by conservative liberalism, is the No.1 party holding a total of 279 seats or 56.8 per cent of the House quorum of 491. . 1975 . 43 . .
- News: Spremberg . Felix . How Japan's Left is repeating its unfortunate history . 28 February 2021 . International Politics & Society Journal . 25 November 2020.
- Book: American Assembly . Willard Long Thorp . Japan's School Curriculum for The 2020s: Politics, Policy, and Pedagogy . It is no accident that Japanese radical liberalism and democratic socialism were both closely connected in their beginnings with the Christian movement in Japan. The first Japanese Socialist Party was born in an Americansponsored Christian church in Tokyo, and the majority of its members were Christians with intimate American connections. . 1964 . 17 . Prentice-Hall.