Okinawa 1st district explained

Okinawa 1st District
Type:Parliamentary
Constituency Link:Okinawa 1st district
Parl Name:Japanese House of Representatives
Map Size:450px
District Label:Prefecture
District:Okinawa
Region Label:Proportional District
Region:Kyushu
Electorate:270,872 (2016)
Year:1994
Members Label:Representative
Members:Seiken Akamine
Seats:One
Elects Howmany:One
Party Label:Party
Party:Japanese Communist Party
Blank1 Name:Municipalities
Blank1 Info:Naha and parts of Shimajiri District (Kumejima, Tokashiki, Zamami, Aguni, Tonaki, Minamidaitō, Kitadaitō)

Okinawa 1st district is a constituency of the House of Representatives in the Diet of Japan (national legislature). It is located in Okinawa Prefecture and encompasses the city of Naha and parts of Shimajiri District (Kumejima, Tokashiki, Zamami, Aguni, Tonaki, Minamidaitō, Kitadaitō). As of 2016, 270,872 eligible voters were registered in the district.[1]

The district has been represented by Seiken Akamine of the Japanese Communist Party (JCP) since the 2014 general election, when he defeated the incumbent member Kōnosuke Kokuba from the Liberal Democratic Party. Akamine is the only JCP politician in the country to currently hold a single-seat constituency.

Background

The 1994 electoral reforms split Okinawa's at-large constituency into four single-district constituencies. In the first three elections after the reforms, Okinawa's 1st district was won by Tai'ichi Shiraho of New Frontier Party and later New Kōmeitō (NKP). The district also features several significant voting blocs. The reliable and sizable Soka Gakkai voting bloc in Naha helped to deliver the district to Shiraho in those elections. The Japanese Communist Party (JCP) has also maintained a relatively large share of vote in the district, banking on the urban voter support and local opposition to the US military bases in Okinawa. Another bloc consists of corporate workers that tend to support the LDP.

In the 2014 general election, the district was won by JCP's Seiken Akamine. Akamine's election was a watershed as it marked the first time a JCP candidate managed to win a single-seat constituency since the 1996 general election. This is also only the third constituency JCP has won since the introduction of parallel voting. The anti-base camp aligned to Okinawa Governor Takeshi Onaga created an alliance behind Akamine to oppose the LDP incumbent at that time, Kōnosuke Kokuba. Kokuba supports the relocation of the US air base in Futenma to Henoko, following the policy of the LDP and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. The centre-right vote was split further with the candidacy of former representative Mikio Shimoji. A strong anti-base vote and the split in the centre-right camp delivered the district to Akamine, completing JCP's surge in the election.[2] [3]

Akamine retained the district in the 2017 general election despite the JCP losing seats across the country. Akamine managed to keep the anti-base camp solidly behind him, giving him a slightly larger majority than 2014.[4]

List of representatives

RepresentativePartyDatesNotes
Tai'ichi Shirahobgcolor= NFP1996 – 1998
bgcolor= NKP1998 – 2005
Mikio Shimojibgcolor= Ind2005 – 2007
bgcolor= PNP2007 – 2012
Kōnosuke Kokubabgcolor= LDP2012 – 2014
Seiken Akaminebgcolor= JCP2014 –

Notes and References

  1. [Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications]
  2. News: LDP loses heavily in Okinawa. Japan Times. Kyodo News. Kyodo News. 15 December 2014. 11 December 2017.
  3. News: Resurgent JCP has night to remember. Japan Times. Mizuho. Aoki. 15 December 2014. 11 December 2017.
  4. News: JCP chief Shii pledges all-out effort to create stronger opposition coalition. Japan Times. Jiji Press. Jiji Press. 3 December 2017. 11 December 2017.