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1924 Japanese general election

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← 1920 10 May 1924 1928 →

All 464 seats to the House of Representatives
233 seats were needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
Leader Kato Takaaki Tokonami Takejirō
Party Kenseikai Seiyūhontō
Last election 110 seats, 27.5%  –
Seats won 151 111
Seat change Increase41  –
Popular vote 872,533 730,077
Percentage 29.3% 24.8%
Swing Increase1.8%  –

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Takahashi Korekiyo Inukai Tsuyoshi
Party Rikken Seiyūkai Kakushin Club
Last election 278 seats, 56.2%  –
Seats won 103 30
Seat change Decrease175  –
Popular vote 666,317 182,720
Percentage 22.2% 6.1%
Swing Decrease34.0%  –

House of Representatives conformation

Prime Minister before election

Kiyoura Keigo
Independent

Subsequent Prime Minister

Kato Takaaki
Kenseikai

General elections were held in Japan on 10 May 1924.[1] No party won a majority of seats, resulting in Kenseikai, Rikken Seiyūkai and the Kakushin Club forming the country's first coalition government led by Katō Takaaki.

Electoral system

The 464 members of the House of Representatives were elected in 295 single-member constituencies, 68 two-member constituencies and 11 three-member constituencies. Voting was restricted to men aged over 25 who paid at least 3 yen a year in direct taxation.[2]

Campaign

A total of 972 candidates contested the elections, of which 265 were from Kenseikai, 242 from Seiyūhontō, 218 from Rikken Seiyūkai, 53 from the Kakushin Club and 194 from minor parties or running as independents.

Results

Party Votes % Seats +/–
Kenseikai 872,533 29.3 151 +41
Seiyūhontō 730,077 24.8 111 New
Rikken Seiyūkai 666,317 22.2 103 –175
Kakushin Club 182,720 6.1 30 New
Others 521,311 17.5 69 +22
Invalid/blank votes 25,310
Total 2,998,268 100 464 0
Registered voters/turnout 3,288,405 91.2
Source: Mackie & Rose, Voice Japan

References

  1. ^ Thomas T Mackie & Richard Rose (1991) The International Almanac of Electoral History, Macmillan, p281
  2. ^ Mackie & Rose, p276