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The New Japanese Electoral Law1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2014

Harold S. Quigley*
Affiliation:
University of Minnesota

Extract

A new statute for the election of members of the House of Representatives was promulgated in Japan on May 5, 1925, and will be applicable in the next general election. It is Japan's fourth electoral law, the previous ones having been promulgated in 1889, 1900, and 1919, respectively. All three of the earlier laws based the suffrage upon a tax-paying qualification, the first requiring voters to pay fifteen yen in direct national taxes, the second reducing the required tax to a minimum of ten yen, the third decreasing it still further to three yen. The present law abolishes the tax-paying qualification and provides that all males twenty-five years of age and over, who are not otherwise disqualified, and who do not receive “public or private relief or help for a living, on account of poverty,” shall be entitled to exercise the suffrage. In addition to paupers and vagabonds, there continue to be excluded from the franchise active members of the army and navy, certain classes of civilian officials, women, and the heads of noble houses. Priests, religious teachers, primary school teachers, government contractors, and certain classes of students hitherto unenfranchised now gain the suffrage and may become candidates for election. Under the law of 1889 the franchise was exercisable by 450,000 men, and under that of 1900 by 983,000; the act of 1919 increased the electorate to 2,860,000; while the present law raises it to an estimated total of 12,000,000.

Type
Foreign Governments and Politics
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 1926

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Footnotes

1

Published in the Japanese monthly Kaizo (Tokyo) for May, 1925, pp. 139–54. The writer of this note acknowledges the assistance of a Japanese student in translating the statute. Diet debates are obtainable in the Japan Chronicle, Sept., 1924 May, 1925.

References

1 Published in the Japanese monthly Kaizo (Tokyo) for May, 1925, pp. 139–54. The writer of this note acknowledges the assistance of a Japanese student in translating the statute. Diet debates are obtainable in the Japan Chronicle, Sept., 1924 May, 1925.

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