• Thumbnail for Second Ichirō Hatoyama Cabinet
    The Second Ichirō Hatoyama Cabinet is the 53rd Cabinet of Japan headed by Ichirō Hatoyama from March 19 to November 22, 1955. "Second Ichirō Hatoyama Cabinet"...
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  • Ichirō Hatoyama Cabinet may refer to: First Ichirō Hatoyama Cabinet, the Japanese majority government led by Ichirō Hatoyama from 1954 to 1955 Second...
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  • Thumbnail for Ichirō Hatoyama
    Ichirō Hatoyama (鳩山 一郎, Hatoyama Ichirō, 1 January 1883 – 7 March 1959) was a Japanese politician who served as Prime Minister of Japan from 1954 to 1956...
    34 KB (3,245 words) - 06:43, 27 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Third Ichirō Hatoyama Cabinet
    Third Ichirō Hatoyama Cabinet is the 54th Cabinet of Japan headed by Ichirō Hatoyama from November 22, 1955 to December 23, 1956. "Third Ichirō Hatoyama Cabinet"...
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  • Thumbnail for First Ichirō Hatoyama Cabinet
    First Ichirō Hatoyama Cabinet was the 52nd Cabinet of Japan. It was headed by Ichirō Hatoyama from December 10, 1954 to March 19, 1955. "First Ichirō Hatoyama...
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  • Thumbnail for Chief Cabinet Secretary
    Prime Minister was Ichirō Hatoyama, who served in the position under Tanaka Giichi. Since then, eight other former chief cabinet secretaries have become...
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    mother of Ichirō Hatoyama, and great-grandmother of Yukio Hatoyama and Kunio Hatoyama. Ichirō Hatoyama (1883 – 1959): Secretary of the Cabinet, Minister...
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  • Thumbnail for List of Japanese cabinets
    lists successive Japanese cabinets, from first cabinet, First Itō Cabinet to current cabinet, Second Kishida Cabinet (Second Reshuffle). Politics portal...
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  • Thumbnail for Katsuya Okada
    Katsuya Okada (category Noda cabinet)
    as the likely successor to Hatoyama. Ichirō Ozawa, however, whose resignation had also been reported announced by Hatoyama, was still supporting another...
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  • Thumbnail for Shigeru Yoshida
    Party, causing his cabinet to resign on December 7, 1954, rather than face a no-confidence vote. He was replaced by Ichirō Hatoyama. on December 10, 1954...
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  • Thumbnail for Democratic Party of Japan
    retained the DPJ name. In 2003, the party was joined by the Liberal Party of Ichirō Ozawa. Following the 2009 election, the DPJ became the ruling party in the...
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  • Thumbnail for Ichirō Ozawa
    Ichirō Ozawa (小沢一郎, Ozawa Ichirō, born 24 May 1942) is a Japanese politician and has been a member of the House of Representatives since 1969, representing...
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  • Thumbnail for Naoto Kan
    saying that he had urged his backer in the party, Ichirō Ozawa, to resign as secretary general. The Cabinet resigned en masse on 4 June. Foreign Minister...
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  • Thumbnail for List of prime ministers of Japan
    [52nd Hatoyama Ichirō] (in Japanese). Official website of the Prime Minister of Japan. Retrieved 10 April 2023. 第53代 鳩山 一郎 [53rd Hatoyama Ichirō] (in Japanese)...
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  • Thumbnail for Asō Cabinet
    meeting. The support rate of the cabinet bounced back as Ichirō Ozawa was hit by scandals. But after Yukio Hatoyama took over as the leader of the opposition...
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  • Thumbnail for Rikken Seiyūkai
    efforts to create a one-party state, and thereafter ceased to exist. Ichirō Hatoyama, who had been a Seiyūkai member of the House of Representatives, led...
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  • Thumbnail for List of political parties in Japan
    jiyūtō) or Hatoyama Liberal Party, the first breakaway of Ichirō Hatoyama and his followers from the Liberal Party, a majority including Hatoyama returned...
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  • smaller conservative parties and independents. Finally in 1955, when Hatoyama Ichirō's Democratic Party minority government called early House of Representatives...
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  • Thumbnail for Ichirō Kōno
    Ichirō Kōno (河野 一郎, Kōno Ichirō, June 2, 1898 – July 8, 1965) was a Japanese politician during the postwar period who served as Deputy Prime Minister...
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  • Thumbnail for Factions in the Liberal Democratic Party (Japan)
    and political developments during the Occupation period. Although Ichirō Hatoyama led his Liberal Party to victory in the 1946 Japanese general election...
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  • portmanteau of Hatoyama and Gerrymander) was an electoral reform proposed in the 1950s by Japanese prime minister Ichirō Hatoyama and his third cabinet. His plan...
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  • Thumbnail for Liberal Party–Hatoyama
    Diet members belonging to the Liberal Party who were supporters of Ichirō Hatoyama; within two days it gained a further 15 seats when the Kozen Hirokawa...
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  • Thumbnail for House of Representatives (Japan)
    to be known as the "you idiot" dissolution. In 1955, prime minister Ichirō Hatoyama oversaw the creation of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which since...
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  • Thumbnail for 1946 Japanese general election
    Progressives agreed to form a government under Liberal leader Ichiro Hatoyama on 2 May, but Hatoyama was promptly purged on 4 May and a new government formed...
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  • Thumbnail for Kenzō Matsumura
    Council. In 1955, Matsumura served as Minister of Education in the Second Hatoyama Cabinet. During this timeframe, Matsumura staunchly opposed the unification...
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  • Thumbnail for Takeru Inukai
    in the 1946 election and became the second party after the Japan Liberal Party led by Ichiro Hatoyama. Hatoyama himself was purged and replaced with...
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  • Thumbnail for Nobusuke Kishi
    November 1954, Kishi co-founded the new Democratic Party along with Ichirō Hatoyama. Hatoyama was the party leader, but Kishi was the party secretary, and crucially...
    72 KB (9,154 words) - 04:43, 24 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Tanzan Ishibashi
    de-purging in 1951, Ishibashi allied with Ichirō Hatoyama and joined the movement against Yoshida's cabinet. In 1953, Hatoyama became prime minister, and Ishibashi...
    15 KB (1,183 words) - 05:04, 19 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Yamamoto Tatsuo
    1922. In 1925, Yamamoto joined the new Seiyūhontō party, along with Hatoyama Ichirō; however, the party failed to gain popular support and soon merged...
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  • Thumbnail for 2011 Democratic Party (Japan, 1998) leadership election
    2005 to 2006. Banri Kaieda, Hatoyama group, trade and industry minister in the Kan cabinet, expected to be backed by Ichirō Ozawa. Sumio Mabuchi, no faction...
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