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Toshihiro Nikai

Japanese politician (born 1939)

Toshihiro Nikai

Summary

Japanese politician (born 1939)

FieldValue
nameToshihiro Nikai
native_name二階 俊博
native_name_langja
imageToshihiro Nikai 20140925 (cropped).jpg
captionOfficial portrait, 2014
office1Secretary-General of the Liberal Democratic Party
president1Shinzo Abe
Yoshihide Suga
vicepresident1Masahiko Kōmura (2016–2018)
term_start14 August 2016
term_end11 October 2021
predecessor1Sadakazu Tanigaki
successor1Akira Amari
{{collapsed infobox section beginlastyesMinisterial officestitlestyle = border:1px dashed lightgrey;}}
{{Infobox officeholderembedyes
office2Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry
primeminister2Yasuo Fukuda
Tarō Asō
term_start22 August 2008
term_end216 September 2009
predecessor2Akira Amari
successor2Masayuki Naoshima
primeminister3Junichiro Koizumi
term_start331 October 2005
term_end326 September 2006
predecessor3Shōichi Nakagawa
successor3Akira Amari
office4Minister of Transport
primeminister4Keizō Obuchi
term_start45 October 1999
term_end44 July 2000
predecessor4Jirō Kawasaki
successor4Hajime Morita
office5Director-General of the Hokkaido Development Agency
primeminister5Keizō Obuchi
term_start55 October 1999
term_end54 July 2000
predecessor5Jirō Kawasaki
successor5Hajime Morita
office6Member of the House of Representatives
constituency6Wakayama 2nd (1983–1996)
Wakayama 3rd (1996–2024)
term_start618 December 1983
term_end69 October 2024
predecessor6Takashi Hayakawa
successor6Constituency abolished
office7Member of the Wakayama Prefectural Assembly
constituency7Gobō City
term_start730 April 1975
term_end729 April 1983
birth_date
birth_placeGobō, Wakayama, Japan
partyLiberal Democratic (Shisuikai)
alma_materChuo University

Yoshihide Suga Tarō Asō Wakayama 3rd (1996–2024) Toshihiro Nikai is a former Japanese politician for the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the leader of the LDP Shisuikai faction (informally called the Nikai faction), who served as the Secretary-General of the LDP from 2016 to 2021. He was previously the Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry. Nikai is currently retired, after thirteen terms in the Lower House representing Wakayama's Third District. He is widely considered to be "Japan's most pro-China lawmaker". He has also been criticized for misogynistic views expressed in the past, and caused controversy when he invited women to "look, but not talk" at key party meetings.

On 31 October 2021, he was elected for the thirteenth time in Japan's 49th general election to the House of Representatives. At the age of 82 years and 8 months, he was the oldest winner in the election.

Also Nikai is Director of the Liberal Democratic Party’s 2025 Osaka-Kansai Expo Promotion Headquarters, President of the National Travel Industry Association, and President of the Japan–China Friendship Parliamentarians' Union.

Early life

Nikai was born in Gobō, Wakayama Prefecture. His father was an assemblyman in the Wakayama Prefectural Assembly who had little time for his son; his mother Kikue was the daughter of a physician and, unusual for that time for a woman in Japan, was a physician herself. He initially attended Inahara Elementary School, but at the end of WWII, he transferred to Gobō Elementary School. While attending Gobō Middle School, he participated in an extracurricular debating society, where he addressed the human rights issues facing the Burakumin, citing The Broken Commandment, a novel by Tōson Shimazaki. After graduation from Wakayama Prefectural Hidaka High School, Nikai attended Chuo University in Tokyo, graduating with a law degree in 1961. He immediately entered politics, working as secretary for Saburo Endo, a Diet member from Shizuoka who was serving as the Minister of Construction.

First election successes

After Endo's death, Nikai returned to Wakayama, where he won a seat on the Wakayama Prefectural Assembly in 1975. He was elected to the House of Representatives in 1983. He was a member of Noboru Takeshita's faction within the Liberal Democratic Party, but left the party in 1993 to join the Japan Renewal Party (Shinseitō). As a member of the JRP, he served as Vice-Minister of Transportation under Morihiro Hosokawa in 1990.

Party membership

He was later a member of the Liberal Party, Conservative Party, and New Conservative Party, independent parties in coalition with the LDP. As Secretary-General of the NCP and part of the governing coalition, he served as Minister of Transportation under Keizō Obuchi and Yoshirō Mori. After the NCP merged with the LDP in 2003, Nikai became an LDP member again, and was appointed Director of the General Affairs Bureau in 2004.

Member of Koizumi Cabinet

In 2005, Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi tapped Nikai to head the Diet committee in charge of the privatization of Japan Post. Following the general elections of that year, on 31 October, Koizumi selected Nikai to head the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, traditionally one of the most highly valued cabinet portfolios.

Nikai (left) and Abe (right)
Nikai (left) and [[Yōichi Masuzoe]] (right)

LDP senior politician

Later, under Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda, Nikai was returned to the post of Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry on 1 August 2008. Nikai is known to have strong ties with Chinese leaders and accompanied relief supplies to Sichuan after the earthquake there in June 2008.

Nikai was appointed LDP Secretary General by party president Shinzo Abe in August 2016. Following Abe's resignation in September 2020, the new party president Yoshihide Suga decided to retain Nikai in this role.

On 25 March 2024, Nikai announced that he would not run for reelection in the next House of Representatives election after his Shisuikai faction disbanded in the wake of the 2023–2024 Japanese slush fund scandal. Nikai also assumed political responsibility for the scandal after Shisuikai failed to declare 35.26 million yen ($233,000) in revenues from ticket sales of its fundraising parties from 2017 to 2022. He thus retired when the House was dissolved in October 2024.

Remarks

Tetsuma Esaki, a former Minister of State for Okinawa and Northern Territories Affairs is known as the second side of Nikai. Because, Nikai was a second side of Masumi Esaki, the father of Tetsuma.

Kakuei Tanaka, a former Prime Minister and Shin Kanemaru, a former Deputy Prime Minister of Japan both have the coined title of "Master of Nikai".

Policy and advocacy

He is considered to be one of the leading pro-China lawmakers, and is the President of the Japan–China Friendship Parliamentarians' Union (from 2023). It has assumed the interests of the LDP in China. In the past, he has been a member of a parliamentary group that supports the Beijing Olympics, and is a politician who has had close ties with China for many years.

Election history

ElectionAgeDistrictPolitical partyNumber of voteselection results
1983 Japanese general election44Wakayama 2nd districtLDP53,611winning
1986 Japanese general election47Wakayama 2nd districtLDP58,722winning
1990 Japanese general election51Wakayama 2nd districtLDP57,663winning
1993 Japanese general election54Wakayama 2nd districtJRP104,600winning
1996 Japanese general election57Wakayama 3rd districtNFP115,681winning
2000 Japanese general election61Wakayama 3rd districtNCP138,527winning
2003 Japanese general election64Wakayama 3rd districtNCP148,274winning
2005 Japanese general election66Wakayama 3rd districtLDP145,735winning
2009 Japanese general election70Wakayama 3rd districtLDP117,237winning
2012 Japanese general election73Wakayama 3rd districtLDP112,916winning
2014 Japanese general election75Wakayama 3rd districtLDP108,257winning
2017 Japanese general election78Wakayama 3rd districtLDP109,488winning
2021 Japanese general election82Wakayama 3rd districtLDP102,834winning

References

References

  1. (15 December 2020). "Heavyweight Nikai's scandal-plagued faction ruffling feathers in Japan's LDP".
  2. ''[[Japan Times]]'', "Fukuda's new lineup", 3 August 2008.
  3. Ryall, Julian. (2021-02-18). "Is the 'most pro-China' politician in Japan's ruling LDP losing his shine?".
  4. (30 January 2018). "Which Country's Interests Does Nikai's Pro-China Diplomacy Serve?".
  5. (17 February 2021). "Japan's LDP party invites women to 'look, not talk' at key meetings".
  6. [http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20080802TDY01303.htm "Fukuda overhauls Cabinet / LDP executive shakeup also elevates Aso to party No. 2"], ''The Yomiuri Shimbun'', 2 August 2008.{{dead link. (April 2024)
  7. (25 September 2008). "Aso elected premier / Announces Cabinet lineup himself; poll likely on Nov. 2".
  8. (15 September 2020). "Suga reshuffles LDP leadership; likely to retain key ministers, except Kono".
  9. (25 March 2024). "LDP's Nikai not to run in next Lower House election".
  10. (10 October 2024). "与野党20人超が引退・不出馬 自民・二階氏、立民・菅氏ら―衆院選". Jiji Press.
  11. (12 August 2017). "【3×3安倍内閣】「もしもし、アベですが…」「どちらのアベさんですか?」 入閣待機組の悲哀続く…".
  12. (13 June 2018). "なぜ"二階" その存在感の理由 {{!}} 特集記事".
  13. (2021-09-29). "<岸田氏が総裁選勝利>「ハト派宏池会」に期待=台湾有事・憲法改正主張には警戒感—中韓両国". [[Record China]].
  14. "2012年衆議院議員選挙:時事ドットコム".
  15. "2014衆院選 {{!}} 衆議院選挙 {{!}} 選挙アーカイブス {{!}} NHK選挙WEB".
  16. 日本放送協会. "2017衆院選 {{!}} 衆議院選挙 {{!}} 選挙データベース {{!}} NHK選挙WEB".
  17. (2021-10-18). "二階俊博(小選挙区・和歌山)【衆議院選挙2021】".
  18. "二階俊博 {{!}} 選挙結果(衆議院) {{!}} 国会議員白書".
  19. "にかい俊博(ニカイトシヒロ)|政治家情報|選挙ドットコム".
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