National Party (Japan)

National Party
国民党
Founded July 1946
Dissolved 8 March 1947
Merger of Shinkō Club and Preparatory Committee for the Japan Democratic Party
Merged into National Cooperative Party
Headquarters Tokyo, Japan
Ideology Japanese nationalism,
Big tent
Political position Centrism
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The National Party (Japanese: 国民党, Kokumintō) was a political party in Japan. A centrist party, its policies had a strong focus on education.[1]

History

The party was established in July 1946 as the Shinseikai (New Politics Society) by a merger of the Shinkō Club, some independent MPs and some MPs from the Preparatory Committee for the Japan Democratic Party,[2] which was subsequently dissolved.[3] It initially had 40 MPs, two of whom were amongst the eight MPs who voted against the new post-war constitution. Talks were held with the Cooperative Democratic Party about a merger in August 1946, and after they fell through, the party was renamed the National Party.[2]

By September 1946 the party had been reduced to 33 MPs.[1] In March 1947 another attempt was made to merge with the Cooperative Democratic Party, which this time was successful, resulting in the creation of the National Cooperative Party.

References

  1. 1 2 Haruhiro Fukui (1985) Political parties of Asia and the Pacific, Greenwood Press, p581
  2. 1 2 Fukui, p617
  3. Fukui, p593
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