Masayoshi Ōhira Explained

Masayoshi Ōhira
Native Name Lang:ja
Office:Prime Minister of Japan
Term Start:7 December 1978
Term End:12 June 1980
Predecessor:Takeo Fukuda
Successor:Masayoshi Itō (acting)
Office1:President of the Liberal Democratic Party
Vicepresident1:Eiichi Nishimura
1Namedata1:Kunikichi Saito
Term Start1:1 December 1978
Term End1:12 June 1980
Predecessor1:Takeo Fukuda
Successor1:Eiichi Nishimura (acting)
Embed:yes
Office2:Minister of Finance
Primeminister2:Kakuei Tanaka
Takeo Miki
Term Start2:16 July 1974
Term End2:24 December 1976
Predecessor2:Takeo Fukuda
Successor2:Hideo Bo
Office3:Minister for Foreign Affairs
Primeminister3:Kakuei Tanaka
Term Start3:7 July 1972
Term End3:16 July 1974
Predecessor3:Takeo Fukuda
Successor3:Toshio Kimura
Primeminister4:Hayato Ikeda
Term Start4:18 July 1962
Term End4:18 July 1964
Predecessor4:Zentaro Kosaka
Successor4:Etsusaburo Shiina
Office5:Minister of International Trade and Industry
Primeminister5:Eisaku Satō
Term Start5:30 November 1968
Term End5:14 January 1970
Predecessor5:Etsusaburo Shiina
Successor5:Kiichi Miyazawa
Office6:Chief Cabinet Secretary
Primeminister6:Hayato Ikeda
Term Start6:19 July 1960
Term End6:18 July 1962
Predecessor6:Etsusaburo Shiina
Successor6:Yasumi Kurogane
Office7:Member of the House of Representatives
Term Start7:1 October 1952
Term End7:12 June 1980
Birth Date:12 March 1910[1]
Birth Place:Kan'onji, Empire of Japan
Death Place:Minato, Tokyo, Japan
Spouse:Shigeko (1916 - 1990)
Children:4
Signature:OhiraM kao.png
Party:Liberal Democratic
Alma Mater:Hitotsubashi University

was a Japanese politician who was Prime Minister of Japan from 1978 to 1980. Ōhira's term was cut short when he died in office; he remains the most recent Japanese Prime Minister to die in office.

Early life

Masayoshi Ōhira was born on 12 March 1910, in Wada, Kagawa Prefecture (present-day Kan'onji, Kagawa), the third son of farmer Toshiyoshi Ōhira and his wife Saku.[2] His father was a representative of the village council and the irrigation union although he had not received any education.[3] He had eight siblings (two elder brothers, three elder sisters, a younger brother and a younger sister) but the eldest of the sisters had died before her first birthday and one of his elder brothers had died at age two. Ōhira referred to himself as "the son of an impoverished farmer of Sanuki" but in reality his family was middle-class. But even then, the parents had a hard time supporting their six children, and Ōhira assisted their side job from a young age.

In 1926, when he was 16 years old, Ōhira contracted typhoid fever and nearly died. This near death experience contributed to his conversion to Christianity around that time.

In 1933, when he was 23, Ōhira won two scholarships and was able to belatedly attend university at the Tokyo University of Commerce (present-day Hitotsubashi University), where he studied economics. In 1936, he entered the Ministry of Finance, where he became a protégé of Hayato Ikeda.

Ōhira worked in the Ministry of Finance throughout World War II. In the postwar period, when Ikeda became Minister of Finance from 1949 to 1952, Ōhira served as his private secretary.

Early political career

In 1952, at Ikeda's urging, Ōhira ran for and won the first of 10 terms in the House of Representatives of the Japanese National Diet, first representing the Liberal Party, and later its successor party the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).

In 1957, as Ikeda prepared a push to try to become prime minister, Ōhira became a founding member of Ikeda's "Kōchikai" think tank, and was widely viewed as Ikeda's "right-hand man".[4] He helped Ikeda write speeches and election manifestos.[4]

Ikeda became prime minister in 1960, when Nobusuke Kishi resigned following the disastrous 1960 Anpo Protests. As a trained economist and trusted member of Ikeda's "brain trust", Ōhira helped design and implement Ikeda's famed Income Doubling Plan, which helped turn the attention of the Japanese people away from contentious political struggles to a nationwide drive for economic growth.[5]

From 1962–1964, Ōhira served as Ikeda's Foreign Minister. In this role, he conducted the delicate negotiations which paved the way for Japan's normalization of relations with South Korea in 1965. When Ikeda died in 1964, Ōhira inherited control of his faction.

LDP power broker and prime minister

At the apex of his political life, Ōhira came to represent what were known as the "mainstream factions" within the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which put him at odds with Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda, who led what were known as the "anti-mainstream" factions.[6] From 1968 to 1970, Ōhira served as Minister of International Trade and Industry under Ikeda's successor Eisaku Satō. In 1972, Ōhira unsuccessfully competed for the party leadership before throwing his support to ultimate winner Kakuei Tanaka. Ōhira was then rewarded for his support with a post as Tanaka's first Foreign Minister, which he held until mid-July 1974.[7] In a cabinet reshuffle in July 1974, he was replaced by Toshio Kimura as Foreign Minister but then immediately appointed Finance Minister, replacing Takeo Fukuda.

Ōhira was elected to the presidency of the LDP in late 1978. On 7 December 1978, he was appointed 68th Prime Minister, successfully pushing longtime rival Takeo Fukuda from his position.[8]

Ōhira was the sixth Christian to hold this office after Hara Takashi, Takahashi Korekiyo, Ichirō Hatoyama, Tetsu Katayama, and Shigeru Yoshida.

In the general election of 1979, the LDP narrowly failed to win an outright majority, but enough independent members of the Diet joined the party to enable Ōhira to remain in office, and he was duly reappointed on 9 November of that year. On 16 May 1980, a vote of no confidence was held in the Diet.

Ōhira expected the motion to fail, and was visibly shaken when it passed 243–187. 69 members of his own LDP, including Fukuda, abstained. Given the choice of resigning or calling new elections, Ōhira chose the latter and began campaigning for LDP candidates.

Death

Ōhira's health started to deteriorate in his 60s. He was hospitalized for exhaustion on 31 May 1980 and died of a massive heart attack on 12 June, ten days before the general elections.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Masayoshi Ito acted in Ōhira's place as deputy after his death. Yoshio Sakurauchi, the Secretary General of LDP, led the LDP to its greatest victory in fifteen years, capitalizing on the "sympathy vote" generated by Ōhira's death. Zenkō Suzuki became Ōhira's successor as prime minister following the election.

Personal life

Religion

Ōhira converted to Christianity during his time at the Takamatsu Higher School of Commerce (now the Takamatsu College of Economics), though without becoming a member of any formal Christian denomination.[9] [10] However, others have stated that he was a member of the Anglican Church in Japan during the 1970s.[11]

Honours

Foreign honours

Order of Leopold (20 January 1964)

Honorary Grand Commander of the Order of the Defender of the Realm (S.M.N.) (1964)[14]

Order of the Southern Cross (16 September 1976)

See also

Bibliography

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Notes and References

  1. News: Man in the News . 5 January 2020 . The New York Times . 1 September 1972.
  2. Book: Hattori . Ryūji . Ōhira Masayoshi : rinen to gaikō . 服部龍二 . 2014 . 978-4-00-029129-3 . 3–5 . Iwanami Shoten . 879561049.
  3. Book: Fukunaga . Fumio . Ōhira Masayoshi : "sengo hoshu" to wa nani ka . 福永文夫 . 2008 . Chūō Kōron Shinsha . 978-4-12-101976-9 . 15–17 . 294936502.
  4. Book: Kapur, Nick. Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo. Harvard University Press. 2018. Cambridge, Massachusetts. 48. 9780674988484.
  5. Book: Kapur, Nick. Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo. Harvard University Press. 2018. Cambridge, Massachusetts. 76, 100–101. 9780674988484.
  6. Nihon Kōgyō Shinbunsha. (1979). Business Japan. Vol. 24, Nos. 10–12, p. 47.
  7. News: Tanaka reshuffles Japanese cabinet. 6 January 2013. Daytona Beach Morning. 17 July 1974. AP. Tokyo.
  8. Brown, James Robert. (1999). The ministry of finance, p. 199.
  9. Book: Choy, Lee Khoon. Japan — Between Myth and Reality. 1995. World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd.. Singapore. 981-02-1865-6. 109. 15 July 2019.
  10. Book: Rothacher, Albrecht. The Japanese Power Elite. 1993. Macmillan Press Ltd.. 978-1-349-22995-6. 87. 15 July 2019. Ohira as a University student later joined the 'no-church movement' and has treated his religious convictions as a private matter ever since..
  11. Book: Ikehara, Mariko. Doak. Kevin M.. Xavier's Legacies: Catholicism in Modern Japanese Culture. 2011. UBC Press. Vancouver, Canada. 978-0-7748-2022-6. 108. 15 July 2019.
  12. From the corresponding article in the Japanese Wikipedia
  13. Web site: 2014-05-23. ja:䝪䞊䜲䝇䜹䜴䝖日本連盟 きじ章受章者 . Recipient of the Golden Pheasant Award of the Scout Association of Japan . http://reinanzaka-sc.o.oo7.jp/kiroku/documents/20140523-3-kiji-list.pdf . https://web.archive.org/web/20200811030258/http://reinanzaka-sc.o.oo7.jp/kiroku/documents/20140523-3-kiji-list.pdf . 2020-08-11 . Reinanzaka Scout Club. ja.
  14. Web site: Semakan Penerima Darjah Kebesaran, Bintang dan Pingat.