Mitsu Kōro Explained

Office1:Deputy Secretary of State for Health and Welfare
Term1:1955
Office2:Member of the House of Councillors
Term2:1947–1968
Constituency2:Tokushima
Office3:Member of the House of Representatives
Term3:1946–1947
Constituency3:Tokushima
Birth Date:10 May 1893
Birth Place:Sakamoto, Japan

Mitsu Kōro (Japanese: 紅露みつ; 10 May 1893 – 28 December 1980) was a Japanese politician. She was one of the first group of women elected to the House of Representatives in 1946.[1] Aside from a brief spell in 1947, she served continuously in parliament until 1968.

Biography

Kōro was born in Sakamoto in Gunma Prefecture in 1893. She attended Kanda Girl's High School in Tokyo, after which she married, who was elected to parliament in 1932. She worked as a journalist. Their son Shinichi was stationed in Hiroshima towards the end of World War II and was killed by the atomic bomb dropped on the city.

After World War II, Akira was banned from holding public office. Instead, Kōro contested the 1946 general elections as an independent candidate in Tokushima, and was elected to the House of Representatives.[2] She subsequently joined the Liberal Party. Although she lost her seat in the April 1947 general election, she returned to parliament after winning a seat in the August 1947 House of Councillors by-elections.

Kōro was subsequently re-elected in 1950 as a National Democratic Party candidate, and in 1956 and 1962 as a Liberal Democratic Party candidate, serving until 1968. She also served as Deputy Secretary of State for Health and Welfare in the second Ichiro Hatoyama cabinet in 1955. In 1965 she was awarded the Order of the Precious Crown.

She died in 1980.

Notes and References

  1. Otsuka Kiyoe (2008) Japanese Women's Legislative and Administrative Reforms in the Postwar Era Bulletin of the Faculty of Education, Kagoshima University
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=mP-SvegbcdUC&pg=PA53 Analysis of the 1946 Japanese General Election