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1977 Japanese House of Councillors election


FieldValue
election_name1977 Japanese House of Councillors election
countryJapan
flag_year1870
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_election1974 Japanese House of Councillors election
previous_year1974
next_election1980 Japanese House of Councillors election
next_year1980
seats_for_election126 of the 252 seats in the House of Councillors
majority_seats127
image_size130x130px
election_date10 July 1977
image1Takeo_Fukuda_19761224.jpg
leader1Takeo Fukuda
party1Liberal Democratic Party (Japan)
last_election1126 seats, 44.3%
seats_after1124
seat_change12
popular_vote118,160,061
percentage135.8%
swing18.5%
image2File:Tomomi-Narita-1.png
leader2Tomomi Narita
party2Japan Socialist Party
last_election262 seats, 15.2%
seats_after256
seat_change26
popular_vote28,805,617
percentage217.3%
swing22.1%
image3Yoshikatsu-Takeiri-3.png
leader3Yoshikatsu Takeiri
party3Kōmeitō (1962–1998)
last_election324 seats, 12.1%
seats_after328
seat_change34
popular_vote37,174,459
percentage314.2%
swing32.1%
image4Kenji Miyamoto (cropped).jpg
leader4Kenji Miyamoto
party4Japanese Communist Party
last_election420 seats, 9.4%
seats_after416
seat_change44
popular_vote44,260,050
percentage48.4%
swing41.0%
image5Kasuga-Ikko-1.jpg
leader5Kasuga Ikkō
party5Democratic Socialist Party (Japan)
last_election510 seats, 5.9%
seats_after511
seat_change51
popular_vote53,387,541
percentage56.7%
swing50.8%
image6Yohei Kono 1985.jpg
leader6Yōhei Kōno
party6New Liberal Club
last_election6
seats_after63
seat_change6New
popular_vote61,957,902
percentage63.9%
swing6New
map_image[[File:1977 Japanese House of Councillors election - Map.svg350px]]
map_captionResults of the election, showing the winning candidates in each prefecture and the national block.
titlePresident of the House
of Councillors
before_electionKazuo Maeda
before_partyLiberal Democratic Party (Japan)
after_electionKan Kase
after_partyJapan Socialist Party

of Councillors](list-of-speakers-of-the-house-of-councillors-japan) House of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 10 July 1977. Only half of the House of Councillors was up for election.

The main question of this election was whether or not the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) would be able to retain its hold on an absolute majority of the seats in the House of Councillors, something it has maintained since the party's founding in 1955. Early forecasts had speculated that this dramatic downturn for the LDP may have been possible, but in the end the LDP kept its razor-thin hold on majority control by having four LDP-allied independents cooperate with it. As per usual for the time, the LDP did very well in the sparsely populated single member districts and even managed to hold its own not only in the two-member districts, but even in the more heavily urbanised three- and four-member districts which were projected to be tough wins for the LDP.

The LDP's clearest struggling was in the national district, where its popular vote declined by 8.5% when compared to the previous House of Councillors election. In any event, the pessimistic forecasts of the election results ended up influencing the LDP's approach in fielding relatively few candidates, and members of the party believed that if they disregarded the polls and fielded more candidates, they could have won a larger share of the seats in this election. Meanwhile, the Japan Socialist Party also saw a loss in seats (partly due to vote splitting caused by former member Saburō Eda's SCL splinter party siphoning away votes from the JSP.) The Japanese Communist Party also saw a decline in fortunes, with Kōmeitō and the Democratic Socialist Party showing the most promise among well-established opposition parties.

Results

after|seattype4=+/–

By constituency

ConstituencyTotal
seatsSeats wonLDPJSPKōmeitōDSPJCPNLCLCSUPLOthersInd.Liberal Democratic Party (Japan)}};"Japan Socialist Party}};"Kōmeitō (1962–1998)}};"Democratic Socialist Party (Japan)}};"Japanese Communist Party}};"New Liberal Club}};"Independent}};"Aichi3Akita1Aomori1Chiba2Ehime1Fukui1Fukuoka3Fukushima2Gifu1Gunma2Hiroshima2Hokkaido4Hyōgo3Ibaraki2Ishikawa1Iwate1Kagawa1Kagoshima2Kanagawa2Kōchi1Kumamoto2Kyoto2Mie1Miyagi1Miyazaki1Nagano2Nagasaki1Nara1Niigata2Ōita1Okinawa1Okayama2Osaka3Saga1Saitama2Shiga1Shimane1Shizuoka2Tochigi2Tokushima1Tokyo4Tottori1Toyama1Wakayama1Yamagata1Yamaguchi1Yamanashi1National50Total1266327146531115
111
1
1
11
1
1
111
11
1
11
11
22
111
11
1
1
1
11
11
1
2
11
1
1
1
11
1
1
11
1
1
11
111
1
11
1
1
11
11
1
1111
1
1
1
1
1
1
18109431113

References

References

  1. Uchida, Mitsuru. (1978). "The House of Councillors Election in Japan: The LDP Hangs in There". Asian Survey.
  2. [http://www.stat.go.jp/data/chouki/zuhyou/27-13.xls Table 13: Persons Elected and Votes Polled by Political Parties - Ordinary Elections for the House of Councillors (1947–2004)] {{Webarchive. link. (2011-03-23 [[Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications]])
  3. "27-11 Allotted Number, Candidates, Eligible Voters as of Election Day, Voters and Voting Percentages of Ordinary Elections for the House of Councillors (1947-2004)".
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