Japanese general election, 1980

Japanese general election, 1980

22 June 1980

All 511 seats to the House of Representatives of Japan
256 seats needed for a majority
Turnout 74.57% (Increase6.56%)

  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Masayoshi Ōhira Ichio Asukata Yoshikatsu Takeiri
Party Liberal Democratic Socialist Komeito
Last election 248 seats, 44.59% 107 seats, 19.71% 57 seats, 9.78%
Seats won 284 107 33
Seat change Increase36 Steady Decrease25
Popular vote 28,262,441 11,400,747 5,329,942
Percentage 47.88% 19.31% 9.03%
Swing Increase3.29% Decrease0.40% Decrease0.74%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Sasaki Ryōsaku Sanzō Nosaka Yōhei Kōno
Party Democratic Socialist Communist New Liberal
Last election 35 seats, 6.78% 39 seats, 10.42% 4 seats, 3.02%
Seats won 32 29 12
Seat change Decrease4 Decrease12 Increase8
Popular vote 3,896,728 5,803,613 1,766,396
Percentage 6.60% 9.83% 2.99%
Swing Decrease0.18% Decrease0.59% Decrease0.3%

  Seventh party
 
Leader Hideo Den
Party Socialist Democratic
Last election 2 seats, 0.68%
Seats won 3
Seat change Increase1
Popular vote 402,832
Percentage 0.68%
Swing Steady

Prime Minister before election

Masayoshi Ōhira
Liberal Democratic

Prime Minister-designate

Zenkō Suzuki
Liberal Democratic

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Japan
Japan portal

In Japan on 16 May 1980, Japan Socialist Party (JSP) brought a no-confidence motion to the Diet, mentioning corruption and rises in public utility charges as reasons for the House of Representatives of Japan (lower house) to withdraw its backing from the government.

Unexpectedly, 69 Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) members of the Diet from the Fukuda Takeo, Miki Takeo and Hidenao Nakagawa factions abstained from voting on the motion. The government was defeated by 56 votes in total of 243 and resigned.

For the first time elections for the both houses of the Diet were called in June 1980. During the election, Prime Minister Masayoshi Ōhira, the leader of the Liberal Democratic Party died during the campaign. Ōhira expected the motion to fail, and was visibly shaken when it passed 243–187. Sixty-nine 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. He was hospitalized for exhaustion on 31 May and died of a massive heart attack 12 days later.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Masayoshi Ito acted in Ōhira's place as deputy after his death. In the elections of both the houses LDP gained a majority. The election results for the lower house are shown in the table below. 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. The Prime Minister was succeeded by Zenkō Suzuki after the election.

Election results

 Summary of the 22 June 1980 Japanese House of Representatives election results[1][2]
Parties CandidatesVotes[3]%Seats+/-
(dissolution)
   Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) 31028,262,44247.88%284Increase36
   Japanese Socialist Party (JSP) 14911,400,74719.31%107Steady0
   Japanese Communist Party (JCP) 1295,803,6139.83%29Decrease12
   Justice Party 645,329,9429.03%33Decrease25
Democratic Socialist Party (DSP) 503,896,7286.60%32Decrease4
New Liberal Club (NLC) 251,766,3962.99%12Increase8
Social Democratic Federation (SDF) 5402,8320.68%3Increase1
Center-left opposition 14411,395,89819.30%80Decrease20
  Others 42109,1680.18%0Steady0
  Independents 612,056,9673.48%11Increase7
Totals (Turnout 74.6%, incl. invalid votes) 83559,028,837100.00%511Increase1
(vacant seat)
Vote share
LDP
47.88%
JSP
19.31%
JCP
9.83%
KP
9.03%
DSP
6.60%
NLC
2.99%
SDF
0.68%
Independents
3.48%
Others
0.18%
Parliament seats
LDP
55.58%
JSP
20.94%
KP
6.46%
DSP
6.26%
JCP
5.68%
NLC
2.35%
SDF
0.59%
Independents
2.15%

References

  • Mahendra Prakash (2004), Coalition Experience in Japanese Politics: 1993-2003, New Delhi: JNU.
  1. Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications (MIC), Statistics Department, Long-term statistics, chapter 27: Public servants and elections, sections 27-7 to 27-10 Elections for the House of Representatives
  2. Interparliamentary Union (IPU): 1979 and 1980 Shūgiin elections
  3. Fractional votes rounded to full numbers
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.