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1892 Japanese general election

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FieldValue
countryEmpire of Japan
typeparliamentary
election_name1892 Japanese general election
election_date15 February 1892
previous_election1890 Japanese general election
previous_year1890
next_electionMarch 1894 Japanese general election
next_yearMarch 1894
seats_for_electionAll 300 seats in the House of Representatives
majority_seats151
image_size130x130px
image1Itagaki Taisuke.jpg
leader1Itagaki Taisuke
party1Liberal Party (Japan, 1890)
last_election1130
seats194
seat_change136
image23x4.svg
party2Chūō Club
color2FFEF6C
last_election2
seats281
seat_change2New
image3Shigenobu Okuma 2.jpg
leader3Ōkuma Shigenobu
party3Rikken Kaishintō
last_election341
seats338
seat_change33
image43x4.svg
party4Dokuristu Club
color4FF8800
last_election4
seats431
seat_change4New
image53x4.svg
color5F2E671
party5Kinki Club
last_election5
seats512
seat_change5New
titlePrime Minister
posttitlePrime Minister after election
before_electionMatsukata Masayoshi
before_partyIndependent (politician)
after_electionMatsukata Masayoshi
after_partyIndependent (politician)

General elections were held in Japan on 15 February 1892 to elect the members of the House of Representatives of the Diet of Japan.

Background

After the 1890 general elections for the lower house of the Diet of Japan, the elected members proved much less amenable to government persuasion than had been anticipated by Itō Hirobumi and other members of the Meiji oligarchy. Rather than docilely rubber stamp legislation issued from the House of Peers and the genrō, the leaders of the lower house used the only leverage granted to them under the Meiji Constitution, withholding budgetary approval, to show resistance. This stalemate led to earlier-than-anticipated dissolution of the government and new elections. Emperor Meiji expressed concern that if the same people were elected again, the same problem would recur, and suggested that regional offices encourage good people to run for office.

Home Minister Shinagawa Yajirō interpreted this as a condemnation of political party activity, and sent memorandums to all regional government offices encouraging the dismissal of men deeply involved in political party activity. He also instructed the police to deal severely with any acts of bribery and intimidation. However, the elections became the most violent in Japanese history, with numerous riots, in which 25 people were killed and 388 wounded. Violence was particularly severe in areas of the country with strong support for the opposition Liberal Party. Encouraged by Prime Minister Matsukata Masayoshi, Shinagawa arrested candidates he deemed "disloyal", and had gangs of toughs molest voters and burn opposition politicians' property. Prefectural governors and police chiefs were secretly ordered to disrupt campaigns of "disloyal" opposition politicians and to aid pro-government supporters. Ballot boxes were stolen in Kōchi Prefecture, and voting was made impossible in parts of Saga Prefecture; violations were most conspicuous in these two prefectures, Ishikawa and Fukuoka.

Electoral system

As with the 1890 elections, the electorate was based on limited suffrage, with only male citizens 25 years of age and over, who had paid 15 Yen or more in national taxes, and who had been resident in their prefecture for at least a year, qualified to vote. The number of eligible voters who met this requirement was 434,594. The number of candidates for office was 900.

Results

Despite the violence, the mintō (liberal parties) – the Liberal Party, Rikken Kaishintō and their affiliates maintained a plurality in the House of Representatives, winning 132 seats as opposed to 124 for pro-government candidates, with 44 independents.

Post-election composition by prefecture

PrefectureTotal
seatsSeats wonLiberalChūōRikken KaishintōDokuritsuKinkiInd.Liberal Party (Japan, 1890)}};"Rikken Kaishintō}};"Independent}};"Aichi11Akita5Aomori4Chiba9Ehime7Fukui4Fukuoka9Fukushima7Gifu7Gunma5Hiroshima10Hyōgo12Ibaraki8Ishikawa6Iwate5Kagawa5Kagoshima7Kanagawa7Kōchi4Kumamoto8Kyoto7Mie7Miyagi5Miyazaki3Nagano8Nagasaki7Nara4Niigata13Ōita6Okayama8Osaka10Saga4Saitama8Shiga5Shimane6Shizuoka8Tochigi5Tokushima5Tokyo12Tottori3Toyama5Wakayama5Yamagata6Yamaguchi7Yamanashi3Total300957941331240
150302
410000
300001
701100
303001
300001
180000
400003
050002
400001
091000
603030
401102
320100
131000
203000
204001
601000
400000
170000
100105
112201
110102
100101
321002
250000
000400
705100
131001
301004
100090
040000
313001
030002
200400
404000
401000
111101
044103
100200
010400
000500
050001
060001
020001
Note: Party affiliation after the general election.

Parliamentary blocs

SessionMarch ClubParliamentarians' AssemblyCentral Negotiation BlocIndependent ClubParliamentarians' ClubOriental Liberal PartyAlliance ClubShiba ClubYūraku GroupIndustrial OrganisationInoue GroupKishū GroupComrades' ClubPolicy Research SocietyOsaka FactionNon-AffiliatedTotal300298299
3rd
6 May - 14 June 1892943895310000000000042
4th
29 November 1892 - 28 February 189390381107042018975500021
5th
29 November 1892 - 28 February 189380420066425009551820619

Aftermath

The government faced an angry lower house when the next Diet term convened on 6 May; even members of the House of Peers were outraged, issuing a resolution condemning the manner in which the elections had been held on 11 May. Shinagawa was forced to resign the following month.

Notes

References

References

  1. W. Scott Morton, J. Kenneth Olenik. ''Japan: Its History and Culture'', p.163. McGraw-Hill Professional, 2004, {{ISBN. 0-07-141280-8
  2. Richard H. Mitchell. ''Political Bribery in Japan'', p.16. University of Hawaii Press, 1996, {{ISBN. 0-8248-1819-9
  3. Donald Keene. (2002). "Emperor Of Japan: Meiji And His World, 1852–1912". Columbia University Press.
  4. [https://web.archive.org/web/20130201135140/https://www.stat.go.jp/data/chouki/zuhyou/27-07.xls Statistics Bureau of Japan]
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