Prime Minister of Japan

For a complete list of office holders, see List of Prime Ministers of Japan.
Prime Minister of Japan
内閣総理大臣

Official Emblem of the Prime Minister of Japan
Incumbent
Shinzō Abe

since December 26, 2012
Style His Excellency
Residence Kantei
Appointer HIM The Emperor
Term length Since 1947: Four years or less. (The Cabinet shall resign en masse after a general election of members of the House of Representatives. Their term of office is four years which can be terminated earlier. No limits are imposed on the number of terms or tenures the Prime Minister may hold.) The Prime Minister is, by convention, the leader of the victorious party, though some prime ministers have been elected from junior coalition partners or minority parties.
Inaugural holder Itō Hirobumi
Formation December 22, 1885
Website www.kantei.go.jp
This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Japan

Japan portal

The Prime Minister of Japan (内閣総理大臣 Naikaku-sōri-daijin) is the head of government of Japan. The Prime Minister is appointed by the Emperor of Japan after being designated by the National Diet and must enjoy the confidence of the House of Representatives to remain in office. He or she is the head of the Cabinet and appoints and dismisses the other Ministers of State. The literal translation of the Japanese name for the office is Minister for the Comprehensive Administration of (or the Presidency over) the Cabinet.

History

Prior to the adoption of the Meiji Constitution, Japan had in practice no written constitution. Originally, a Chinese-inspired legal system known as ritsuryō was enacted in the late Asuka period and early Nara period. It described a government based on an elaborate and rational meritocratic bureaucracy, serving, in theory, under the ultimate authority of the Emperor; although in practice, real power was often held elsewhere, such as in the hands of the Fujiwara clan, who intermarried with the Imperial Family in the Heian period, or by the ruling Shogun. Theoretically, the last ritsuryō code, the Yōrō Code enacted in 752, was still in force at the time of the Meiji Restoration.

Under this system, the Daijō-daijin (太政大臣, Chancellor of the Realm)[1] was the head of the Daijō-kan (Department of State), the highest organ of Japan's pre-modern Imperial government during the Heian period and until briefly under the Meiji Constitution with the appointment of Sanjō Sanetomi in 1871. The office was replaced in 1885 with the appointment of Itō Hirobumi to the new position of Prime Minister,[2] four years before the enactment of the Meiji Constitution, which mentions neither the Cabinet nor the position of Prime Minister explicitly.[3][4] It took its current form with the adoption of the Constitution of Japan in 1947.

The current Prime Minister is Shinzō Abe, who took office on December 26, 2012. He is the first former Prime Minister to return to office since 1948.

Appointment

The Prime Minister is designated by both houses of the Diet, before the conduct of any other business. For that purpose, each conducts a ballot under the run-off system. If the two houses choose different individuals, then a joint committee of both houses is appointed to agree on a common candidate. Ultimately, however, if the two houses do not agree within ten days, the decision of the House of Representatives is deemed to be that of the Diet. Therefore, the House of Representatives can theoretically ensure the appointment of any Prime Minister it wants.[5] The candidate is then presented with their commission, and formally appointed to office by the Emperor.[6]

Qualifications

Role

Constitutional roles

Statutory roles

Insignia

Official office and residence

Located near the Diet building, the Office of the Prime Minister of Japan is called the Kantei (官邸). The original Kantei served from 1929 until 2002, when a new building was inaugurated to serve as the current Kantei.[17] The old Kantei was then converted into the Official Residence, or Kōtei (公邸).[18] The Kōtei lies to the southwest of the Kantei, and is linked by a walkway.[18]

Honours and emoluments

Until the mid-1930s, the Prime Minister of Japan was normally granted a hereditary peerage (kazoku) prior to leaving office if he had not already been ennobled. Titles were usually bestowed in the ranks of count, viscount or baron, depending on the relative accomplishments and status of the Prime Minister. The two highest ranks, marquess and prince, were only bestowed upon highly distinguished statesmen, and were not granted to a Prime Minister after 1928. The last Prime Minister who was a peer was Baron Kijūrō Shidehara, who served as Prime Minister from October 1945 to May 1946. The peerage was abolished when the Constitution of Japan came into effect in May 1947.

Certain eminent Prime Ministers have been awarded the Order of the Chrysanthemum, typically in the degree of Grand Cordon. The highest honour in the Japanese honours system, the Collar of the Order of the Chrysanthemum, has only been conferred upon select Prime Ministers and eminent statesmen; the last such award to a living Prime Minister was to Saionji Kinmochi in 1928. More often, the Order of the Chrysanthemum has been a posthumous distinction; the Collar of the order was last awarded posthumously to former Prime Minister Eisaku Satō in June 1975. The Grand Cordon has typically been posthumously awarded; the most recent such award was to Ryutaro Hashimoto in July 2006. Currently, Yasuhiro Nakasone is the only living former Prime Minister to hold the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Chrysanthemum, which he received in 1997.

After relinquishing office, the Prime Minister is normally accorded the second or senior third rank in the court order of precedence, and is usually raised to the senior second rank posthumously. Certain distinguished Prime Ministers have been posthumously raised to the first rank; the last such award was to Sato Eisaku in 1975. Since the 1920s, following their tenure in office, Prime Ministers have typically been conferred with the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Paulownia Flowers (until 2003 a special higher class of the Order of the Rising Sun), depending on tenure and eminence. However, honours may be withheld due to misconduct or refusal on the part of the Prime Minister (for example, Kiichi Miyazawa).

List of living former Prime Ministers

As of December 2016, twelve former Prime Ministers of Japan are alive. The most recent death of a former Prime Minister of Japan is that of Kiichi Miyazawa (1991–93) on June 28, 2007.

NameTerm of officeDates of birth
Yasuhiro Nakasone 1982–1987 May 27, 1918
Toshiki Kaifu 1989–1991 January 2, 1931
Morihiro Hosokawa 1993–1994 January 14, 1938
Tsutomu Hata 1994 August 24, 1935
Tomiichi Murayama 1994–1996 March 3, 1924
Yoshirō Mori 2000–2001 July 14, 1937
Jun'ichirō Koizumi 2001–2006 January 8, 1942
Yasuo Fukuda 2007–2008 July 16, 1936
Tarō Asō 2008–2009 September 20, 1940
Yukio Hatoyama 2009–2010 February 11, 1947
Naoto Kan 2010–2011 October 10, 1946
Yoshihiko Noda 2011–2012 May 20, 1957

Lists of Prime Ministers of Japan

See also

References

  1. Kenkyusha's New Japanese-English Dictionary, Kenkyusha Limited, ISBN 4-7674-2015-6
  2. Legal framework for Prime Minister and Cabinet in the Empire: Dajōkan proclamation No. 69 of December 22, 1885 (内閣職権, naikaku shokken), later replaced by Imperial edict No. 135 of 1889 (内閣官制, naikaku kansei) in effect until 1947
  3. Article 55 of the Imperial Constitution only bound the ministers of state, i.e. all members of the cabinet including the prime minister, to "give their advice to the Emperor and be responsible for it."
  4. Kantei: Cabinet System of Japan
  5. Article 67 of the Constitution of Japan
  6. Article 6 of the Constitution of Japan
  7. Article 5 of the Constitution of Japan
  8. 1 2 Article 72 of the Constitution of Japan
  9. Article 74 of the Constitution of Japan
  10. Article 68 of the Constitution of Japan
  11. Article 75 of the Constitution of Japan
  12. Article 63 of the Constitution of Japan
  13. Article 7 of the Constitution of Japan
  14. Cabinet Act2012, article 4
  15. Self-Defense Forces Act of 1954
  16. Administrative Litigation Act, article 27
  17. Nakata, Hiroko (March 6, 2007). "The prime minister's official hub". The Japan Times Online. The Japan Times. Retrieved October 21, 2007.
  18. 1 2 "A virtual tour of the former Kantei – Annex etc. – The Residential Area". Prime Minister of Japan. Retrieved October 21, 2007.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Prime ministers of Japan.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.