Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Morihiro Hosokawa

 
Wikipedia: Morihiro Hosokawa
In this Japanese name, the family name is Hosokawa.
Morihiro Hosokawa
細川 護熙

In office
9 August 1993 – 28 April 1994
Monarch Akihito
Preceded by Kiichi Miyazawa
Succeeded by Tsutomu Hata

Born 14 January 1938 (1938-01-14) (age 71)
Tokyo, Japan
Political party Democratic Party (1998–present)
Other political
affiliations
Liberal Democratic Party (Before 1992)
New Party (1992–1994)
New Frontier Party (1996–1998)
Spouse(s) Kayoko Hosokawa
Alma mater Sophia University

Morihiro Hosokawa (細川 護煕 Hosokawa Morihiro, born January 14, 1938) is a Japanese politician who was the 79th Prime Minister of Japan from August 9, 1993 to April 28, 1994. His coalition was the first non-Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) government since 1955.

Contents

Early life

Hosokawa Morihiro was born in Tokyo as the eldest son of Marquis Morisada Hosokawa, the head of the Hosokawa clan. He is the grandson of former Japanese Prime Minister Fumimaro Konoe. Owing to his birth, he was born a marquis, but lost the title in 1947 at the age of nine when the kazoku, or peerage was abolished by the American occupation government.

He received his LL.B. from Sophia University in 1961. After working for the newspaper the Asahi Shimbun as journalist for several years, he was elected to the House of Councillors of Japan as a member of the LDP in 1971, representing Kumamoto Prefecture.

After serving two terms in the National Diet, he left in 1983 to become the governor of Kumamoto, where he served until 1991.

In 1992, he announced that he could no longer stand the corruption in the LDP and left in order to found the reformist Japan New Party (JNP).

Prime Minister

In the summer of 1993, in a change very few had foreseen even a year earlier, the LDP lost its majority in the Diet for the first time in thirty-eight years and was replaced by an eight-party coalition government which promised a series of social, political, and economic reforms. Excluding the JCP, the coalition was backed by all of the former opposition parties, which included the newly formed JNP, the Japan Socialist Party, the Japan Renewal Party (Shinseito), Komeito, the Democratic Socialist Party, the Social Democratic Federation, the RENGO and the New Party Sakigake. Hosokawa, one of the major voices in forming the coalition, was chosen as the new Prime Minister.

One of the first things the newly elected PM did was to say what no other Japanese leader, including the Emperor, had said for forty-eight years.[citation needed] In his August 15, 1993 speech at the annual war memorial services, he publicly acknowledged that World War II was a "war of aggression, a mistaken war" and expressed responsibility and condolences to the war victims and survivors, in Japan, its Asian neighbors, and the rest of the world.

On November 6, 1993, he visited South Korea. On March 19, 1994, he visited China, and the two governments signed an agreement of cooperation in environmental protection.

Although his coalition managed to secure passage of legislation to reform the electoral system in 1994, the subject of a long-running national debate, Hosokawa’s run as PM was short lived. Under allegations that he had misused personal funds in the 1980s, he was forced to resign later that year, just eight months after taking office. After his resignation, the coalition was taken over by the Shinseito president Tsutomu Hata.

Cabinet

Cabinet of Morihiro Hosokawa
Chief Cabinet Secretary Masayoshi Takemura (Sakigake)
Foreign Affairs Tsutomu Hata (Shinseito)
Justice Akira Mikazuki (non-affiliated)
Finance Hirohisa Fujii (Shinseito)
Education Yoko Akamatsu (non-affiliated)
Health and Welfare Keigo Ouchi (Democratic Socialist)
Labor Chikara Sakaguchi (Komeito)
Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Eijiro Hata (Shinseito)
International Trade and Industry Hiroshi Kumagai (Shinseito)
Transport Shigeru Ito (Socialist)
Construction Kozo Igarashi (Socialist)
Home Affairs and National Public Safety Commission Kanju Sato (Socialist)
Posts and Telecommunications Takenori Kanzaki (Komeito)
Management and Coordination Agency Koshiro Ishida (Komeito)
Japan Defense Agency Hiroyoshi Nakanishi (Shinseito) until December 1, 1993
Kazuo Aichi (Shinseito) after December 2, 1993
Hokkaido and Okinawa Development, National Land Agency Kosuke Uehara (Socialist)
Economic Planning Agency Manae Kubota (Socialist)
Environment Wakako Hironaka (Komeito)
Council for Science and Technology Policy Satsuki Eda (Social Democratic)
Minister of State Sadao Yamahana (Socialist)

Later political life

Hosokawa joined Shinshinto in 1996, and later moved to the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) in 1998 from which he retired from politics in May of that year.

In his retirement, he has taken up pottery which has been exhibited in Japan and Europe. He is also a special consultant to The Japan Times. Upon his father's death in 2005, Hosokawa succeeded him as the head of the Hosokawa family.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Kiichi Miyazawa
Prime Minister of Japan
1993–1994
Succeeded by
Tsutomu Hata
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Kiichi Miyazawa
Chair of the G8
1993
Succeeded by
Silvio Berlusconi

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 
Learn More
Tsutomu Hata (Japanese politician)
Soka Gakkai (Buddhism, politics, Japan)
Morihiro Hosokawa (Japanese politician)

Help us answer these
Who is hajime hosokawa who found minimata disease?
Who is dr hosokawas who discoverd minimata disease?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Morihiro Hosokawa" Read more