List of members of Nippon Kaigi

Among the members, former members, and members of affiliated organizations of the Nippon Kaigi ("Japan Conference") are lawmakers, cabinets ministers and a few prime ministers.[a]

Shinzō Abe (1954–2022)
Tarō Asō
Yoshihide Suga
Fumio Kishida
Shigeru Ishiba

Members and affiliates, by profile

edit

Prime ministers or former prime ministers

edit

Ministers or former Ministers

edit

Nippon Kaigi leaders

edit

Honor presidents

edit

Presidents

edit

Vice-presidents

edit
  • Aiko Anzai – a vocalist and politician
  • Ichiro Aisawa – former Senior Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs – Diet member – Chairman, House of Representatives Rules and Administration Committee – Vice-President of the Japan Scout Parliamentary Association
  • Shiro Odamura – President of MEISEISHA Co., Ltd, former Head teacher of Takushoku University,[13] also head of the Friends of Lee Teng-hui Association[14]
  • Koichiro Ishii – former chairman, Bridgestone Cycle Corp.[3]
  • Keiichiro Kobori – Professor Emeritus, University of Tokyo
  • Kenko Matsuki – politician[3]
  • Tsunekiyo Tanaka – President of Association of Shinto Shrines, Chief priest of Iwashimizu Hachimangū.

Advisors

edit

The presence of Shinto chief priests, some with imperial blood, is consistent with Nippon Kaigi's aim to restore the Shinto god-like status of the Emperor of Japan.

  • Michihisa Kitashirakawa – High Priest of the Ise Grand Shrine, and great-grandson of the Emperor Meiji
  • Sangmu Takatsukasa (Naotake Takatsukasa) – Chief Priest of the Ise Grand Shrine, adopted child of princess Kazuko Takatsukasa
  • Sadahiro Hattori – Honorary Chief Priest of the Iwazu Tenmangu Shrine
  • Eshin Watanabe – Chief Priest of Enryaku-ji Temple, Supreme Priest of the Tendai Buddhist Denomination, Honorary President of the Japan Conference of Religious Representatives (JCRR)

Secretary-General

edit

Yuzo Kabashima – Chairman of Nippon Kyogikai (Council of Japan)

Key person

edit

Iwao Andoh – Teacher of New Thought Seicho-no-Ie ("House of Growth")

Members and affiliates, by name

edit

(In italics, already listed above)

  • Shinzō Abe (1954–2022) (Prime Minister)
  • Masashi Adachi (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Yoichi Anami (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Aiko Anzai (Vice President, Nippon Kaigi) – a vocalist and politician
  • Jiro Aichi (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Ichiro Aisawa (Vice President, Nippon Kaigi) – former Senior Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs – Diet member – Chairman, House of Representatives Rules and Administration Committee – Vice-President of the Japan Scout Parliamentary Association
  • Masaaki Akaike (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Kyotoku Akimoto (Representative, Shinsei Bukkyo – Buddhist sect – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Tsukasa Akimoto (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Councillors in the Diet)
  • Akira Amari (Minister)[15][16]
  • Kazuhiko Aoki (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Kazuo Aoyagi (Executive director, Reiyūkai – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Shuhei Aoyama (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Eiko Araki (Part of a delegation of 41 Nippon Kaigi members from Tokyo who went to Saipan in 2005)[17]
  • Haruko Arimura (Minister)[15][16]
  • Hiroshi Ando (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Tarō Asō (Vice Prime Minister, Minister of Finance)
  • Toru Azuma (Nippon Ishin no Kai)[15][16]
  • Nobuaki Chosokabe (Chairman of the Sinseiren / Shinto Seiji Renmei Kokkai Giin Kondankai / Shinto Political League / Shinto Association of Spiritual Leadership / 神道政治連盟国会議員懇談会 – Chief Priest, Iyozuhikonomikoto Shrine – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Tōru Doi (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Yoshihiko Ebihara (Former Prime Minister's Office deputy director – Former member of the House of Councilors – Keidanren, military pension – member of Representative Committee of Nippon Kaigi)
  • Takashi Endo (Nippon Ishin no Kai)[15][16]
  • Akinori Eto (Minister)
  • Seiichi Eto (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the Diet)[12]
  • Seishiro Eto (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Taku Etō (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Michio Ezaki (Former Editor in Chief, Sokoku to seinen (Fatherland and youth) author or co-author of 'Japan and Korea: Kindred Spirits for 2000 Years', 'The Alleged "Nanking Massacre"', 'Japan's Rebuttal to China's Forged Claims', 'The World Judges the Tokyo Trials', 'Anti-Japanese Networks Drag Japan into a Quagmire – Senior Fellow at Nippon Kaigi, policy research)[18]
  • Keiji Furuya (Liberal Democratic Party, a member of the Diet – National Public Safety Commissioner)[19]
  • Pema Gyalpo (Political scientist, first non-Japanese member)
  • Yasushi Kaneko (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Hideaki Kase (a diplomatic critic, and the son of World War II diplomat Toshikazu Kase – Chairman of Society for the Dissemination of Historical Fact – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Katsunobu Katō (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Sato Kazuo (Professor Emeritus, Aoyama Gakuin University – International Law – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Yoshio Keino (President, Japan Teachers' Association – Professor at Heisei International University, Faculty of Law, Law and Political Science – Board member of Kenpo Gakkai (The Constitutional Law Association), and of Nippon Kaigi)
  • Minoru Kihara (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Seiji Kihara (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Yoshio Kimura (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Nobuo Kishi (Minister – brother of Shinzō Abe and grandson of Nobusuke Kishi)
  • Fumio Kishida (current Prime Minister)
  • Shigeo Kitamura (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Yasumitsu Kiuchi (Commissioner General of the National Police Agency – Representative Committee, Nippon Kaigi – Father of Minoru Kiuchi, Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Takeo Kawamura (Minister)
  • Keiichiro Kobori (Vice President, Nippon Kaigi)
  • Kazuo Kogushi (Chief Priest, Atsuta Shrine – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Yuriko Koike (Minister)
  • Kenji Kosaka (Minister)
  • Kishō Kurokawa (1934–2007 – architect and one of the founders of the Metabolist Movement)
  • Muneharu Kurozumi (Chief Patriarch of Kurozumikyō, a cult that worships the rising sun – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Fumio Kyūma (Minister)
  • Seiji Maehara (Minister)
  • Hideki Makihara (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Tamayo Marukawa (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet, former Minister of State for the Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games)
  • Tade Masanari ("the executive director of Nippon Kaigi Hiroshima and the son of an A-bomb victim"[25])
  • Jin Matsubara (Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Rui Matsukawa (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Shigefumi Matsuzawa (Nippon Ishin no Kai – member of the House of Councillors in the Diet)
  • Kenko Matsuki (Vice President, Nippon Kaigi)
  • Fumiaki Matsumoto (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Yohei Matsumoto (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Hirokazu Matsuno (Minister)
  • Toshikatsu Matsuoka (Minister) (1945–2007)
  • Kitashirakawa Michihisa (Advisor, Nippon Kaigi)
  • Asahiko Mihara (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Junko Mihara (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Toru Miyoshi (President, Nippon Kaigi)
  • Yoshio Mochizuki (Minister)
  • Eisuke Mori (Minister)
  • Satoshi Morimoto (Minister)
  • Takao Ochi (Liberal Democratic Party, House of Representatives)[15][16]
  • Shiro Odamura (Vice President, Nippon Kaigi)
  • Kiyoshi Odawara (Liberal Democratic Party, House of Representatives)[15][16]
  • Masanobu Ogura (Liberal Democratic Party, House of Representatives)[15][16]
  • Hideo Ohnishi (Liberal Democratic Party, House of Representatives)[15][16]
  • Hiroyuki Ohnishi (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Keitaro Ohno (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Fusae Ohta (House of Councilors, former Governor of Osaka)[15][16]
  • Satoshi Oie (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Yasuhiko Ōishi (1922–2014 – Economist, Professor Emeritus, University of Tokyo – member of Representative Committee of Nippon Kaigi)
  • Hiroshi Okada (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Keishu Okada (the daughter of Yoshikazu Okada, who founded the Mahikari cult, she founded the Sukyo Mahikari cult, which states that Adolf Hitler and the Second World War had the blessing of the Creator God – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)[3]
  • Seiho Okano (Leader of the Gedatsu-kai cult – Chairman of Shinshuren, the Federation of New Religious Organizations of Japan – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)[3]
  • Shohei Okashita (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Hisahiko Okazaki (1930–2014 – diplomat, director of the Okazaki Institute)
  • Kazuhide Okuma (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Shinsuke Okuno (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Asako Omi (Liberal Democratic Party of Japan - member of the House of Representatives)[15][16]
  • Makoto Oniki (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives at the Diet)[15][16]
  • Kiyoko Ono (former Olympic gymnast, Minister of State, chairman of National Safety Commission)
  • Hiroo Onoda (1922–2014 – the Imperial Japanese Army intelligence officer who refused to surrender after World War II, hiding in the Philippines until 1974 – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Itsunori Onodera (Minister)
  • Toshitaka Ooka (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Hidehisa Otsuji (Minister) – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee[15][16]
  • Tadamori Oshima (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Taku Otsuka (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Takashi Otsuka (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Yasuhiro Ozato (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Tatsuo Ozawa, NFP~the Reform Club
  • Hirofumi Ryu (Democratic Party of Japan – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Shoichi Saeki (Professor Emeritus, University of Tokyo – literary critic – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Tetsushi Sakamoto (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Yoshitaka Sakurada (Liberal Democratic Party, a member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Yoshiko Sakurai (Journalist, TV presenter, and writer – President, Japan Institute for National Fundamentals)
  • Akiko Santo (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Councillors in the Diet – former actress)
  • Noritaka Sekiguchi (the Chairman of and the son of the founders of the cult Bussho Gonenkai Kyōdan – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Masayuki Shibuki (Chairman, Kohken Co. Ltd – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Atsushi Shima (Chief of Staff, Japanese Government Self Defense Force – General – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Yoshiko Shima (Chairman, Asahi Photos News Inc. – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Hakubun Shimomura (Minister)
  • Yoshitaka Shindō (Minister)
  • Sadanoyama Shinmatsu (actual name Shinmatsu Ichikawa – former sumo wrestler, yokozuna, and head of the Japan Sumo Association – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Yasuhisa Shiozaki (Minister)
  • Hiroyuki Sonoda (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives at the Diet)
  • Tenkoko Sonoda (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the Diet – widow of former Foreign Minister Sunao Sonoda – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Hansō Sōshitsu (the 15th in a series of Japanese tea masters of the Urasenke family – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Yoshihide Suga (Minister and Prime Minister)[1]
  • Isshu Sugawara (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Iwao Sumoge (President of Densho Engineering Co., Ltd – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Shun'ichi Suzuki (Minister)
  • Keiichiro Uchino (CEO of Uchino, a law firm – President of the Tokyo Nakano Branch of Nippon Kaigi – Organized a November 2013 party to celebrate the Shinzō Abe cabinet where the Imperial Rising Sun Flag was flown, the "Kimigayo" sung, and the pledge to "break away from the post-war regime" renewed.[29]
  • Kazuo Uemura (Institute of Japanese Culture and Nationality / Kokubunken – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)
  • Kenichiro Ueno (Liberal Democratic Party – member of the House of Representatives in the Diet)
  • Michiko Ueno (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Yasuto Urano (Nippon Ishin no Kai)[15][16]
  • Tadanobu Usami (President of UI Zensen Domei labor union – RENGO – member of the Representative Committee of Nippon Kaigi)
  • Takashi Uto (Liberal Democratic Party)[15][16]
  • Tetsuhiko Utsunomiya (Chairman of Nikka Corp – member of Nippon Kaigi representative committee)

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Toshiro Mayuzumi is not included on this list. While intended as Nippon Kaigi's first chairman, he passed away in April 1997; seven weeks before the inaugural general meeting in May 1997.

References

edit

In general retrieved from Nippon Kaigi website

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Abe’s reshuffle promotes right-wingers" (Korea Joongang Daily – 2014/09/05)
  2. ^ "Ishiba cannot rival Abe for Japan leadership yet". Emerald Expert Briefings. oxan–db (oxan–db). 2017-01-01. doi:10.1108/OXAN-DB223607. ISSN 2633-304X.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Nippon Kaigi website
  4. ^ a b c d e "Pro-Yasukuni lineup features Aso Cabinet" – Japan Press Weekly – Sept 24, 2008
  5. ^ a b c "Major conservative nationalist organizations in Japan Archived 2014-09-02 at the Wayback Machine" (Asia Policy Point – 2007)
  6. ^ "日本会議の全貌、花伝社" (Yoshifumi Tawara, Kadensha, 2016)
  7. ^ Larsson, Ernils (2017-03-09). "Kindergarten scandal shows Japan's nationalist far-right out of touch". East Asia Forum. Retrieved 2024-09-17.
  8. ^ "菅新内閣20人中14人が「日本会議」のメンバー…右翼色は依然と Archived 2020-09-17 at the Wayback Machine" (Yahoo News 2020/09/16)
  9. ^ a b Hirata, Keiko. "Politics of Contention: Japanese Debates on the US-Japan Security Alliance" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the ISA's 50th ANNUAL CONVENTION "EXPLORING THE PAST, ANTICIPATING THE FUTURE", New York Marriott Marquis, New York City, NY, Feb 15, 2009
  10. ^ Yoshifumi Tawara – "日本会議の全貌、花伝社" Kadensha, 2016
  11. ^ (in Japanese) « 日本会議国会議員懇談会のメンバー », asyura2.com, 02/09/2009
  12. ^ a b "Nationalist ‘Japan Conference’ building its clout" – Korea JoongAng Daily – May 3, 2013
  13. ^ "The Quest for Japan's New Constitution: An Analysis of Visions and Constitutional Reform Proposals 1980–2009" p.75 (Christian G. Winkler, Routledge Contemporary Japan Series, 2011)
  14. ^ "Ex-president has no plans to meet with PM during Japan visit" – Focus Taiwan – Aug 12, 2014
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be "日本会議の全貌——知られざる巨大組織の実態" Yoshifumi Tawara、2016/06/17。ISBN 9784763407818
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be "日本会議と神社本庁" ("Japan Conference and the Association of Shinto shrines") Muneo Narusawa 2016/06/28。ISBN 9784865720105
  17. ^ a b "Group gives away emperor’s poem to well-wishers Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine" – Saipan Tribune – Jun 28, 2005
  18. ^ Profile: Ezaki Michio – Society for the Dissemination of Historical Fact
  19. ^ a b c d "Pro-Yasukuni parliamentary groups backing up Abe Cabinet" – Japan Press Weekly – May 27, 2007
  20. ^ Yoshifumi Tawara, 'Full Picture of the Japan Conference' (Kadensha 2016)
  21. ^ a b c "菅新内閣20人中14人が「日本会議」のメンバー…右翼色は依然と" Archived 2020-09-17 at the Wayback Machine (Yahoo! News September 16, 2020)
  22. ^ "Japan Rightists Fan Fury Over North Korea Abductions" – New York Times – Dec 17, 2006
  23. ^ "Tea Party Politics in Japan" (New York Times – 2014/09/13)
  24. ^ "East Asia's Haunted Present. Historical Memories and the Resurgence of Nationalism" by Tsuyoshi Hasegawa and Kazuhiko Togo – pp 127–128
  25. ^ Asahi Shimbun Aug 6, 2009 – quoted in Cable 09TOKYO1813, DAILY SUMMARY OF JAPANESE PRESS 08/07/09
  26. ^ Chosun Ilbo Right wing lawmaker rant at Koreans Retrieved on May 17, 2013
  27. ^ HGGN http://www.hngn.com/articles/3122/20130517/japanese-restoration-party-leader-shingo-nishimura-gets-boot-more-controversial.htm Retrieved on May 17, 2013
  28. ^ "Japanese comfort- women deniers force White House response" – - Foreign Policy – June 6, 2012
  29. ^ Nippon Kaigi website – 2013: nipponkaigi.jp/archives/391 Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine – NB: on the law firm's website (uchino-law.com), there is a direct link to the site of Nippon Kaigi Tokyo Nakano Branch – retrieved Nov 24, 2014)
  30. ^ "PUSHING REVISION: Nippon Kaigi sent staffers to help struggling LDP candidates" – Asahi Shimbun 20160905
  NODES
admin 2
Association 10
COMMUNITY 1
Idea 1
idea 1
INTERN 3
Note 3