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Japanese Communist Party
日本共産党
PresidentKazuo Shii
Secretary-GeneralYoshiki Yamashita
Representatives leaderKeiji Kokuta
Councillors leaderYoshiki Yamashita
FoundedJuly 15, 1922 (July 15, 1922)
Headquarters4-26-7 Sendagaya, Shibuya, Tokyo 151-8586, Japan
Youth wingDemocratic Youth League of Japan
Membership (2014)Increase 320,000 [1]
IdeologyScientific socialism[2]
Eurocommunism[2]
Pacifism[3]
Political positionLeft-wing
Colours  Red
Representatives
21 / 475
Councillors
11 / 242
Prefectural assembly members[4][5]
136 / 2,725
Municipal assembly members[4][5][6]
2,752 / 32,070
Party flag
Website
www.jcp.or.jp/english/
Kazuo Shii, Chair of the Central Committee (2000 - present)
JCP members From left, Tokuda Kyuichi, Nosaka Sanzo, and Yoshio Shiga. (During 1945-1946)
Japanese Communist Party Headquarters

The Japanese Communist Party (JCP, Template:Lang-ja, Nihon Kyōsan-tō) is a communist political party in Japan and is one of the largest non-governing communist parties in the world.

The JCP advocates the establishment of a society based on socialism, democracy, peace, and opposition to militarism. It proposes to achieve its objectives by working within a democratic framework in order to achieve its goals, while struggling against what it describes as "imperialism and its subordinate ally, monopoly capital." The party does not advocate violent revolution; it proposes a "democratic revolution" to achieve "democratic change in politics and the economy", and "the complete restoration of Japan's national sovereignty", which it sees as infringed by Japan's security alliance with the United States although it firmly defends Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution.

Following the most recent general election, held on December 14, 2014, the party holds 21 seats in the House of Representatives and following the most recent councillors election, held on July 21, 2013, the party holds 11 seats in the House of Councillors.[7]

Outline

The JCP is one of the largest non-ruling communist parties in the world, with approximately 320,000 members belonging to 22,000 branches. In the wake of the Sino-Soviet split, the party began to distance itself from the Socialist Bloc, especially from the Soviet Union. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the JCP released a press statement titled, "We welcome the end of a party which embodied the historical evil of Great Power chauvinism and hegemonism" (Template:Lang-ja), while at the same time criticizing Eastern European countries for abandoning socialism, describing it as a "reversal of history".[8]

Consequently, the party has not suffered an internal crisis as a result of the collapse of the Soviet Union, nor has it considered disbanding or changing its name or fundamental objectives, as many other Communist parties have done. It polled 11.3% of the vote in 2000, 8.2% in 2003, 7.3% in 2005, and 7.0% in the August 2009 election. In recent years its support has accrued; as of the 2014 General Election it won 21 seats, up from eight in the previous general election. The JCP took 7,040,130 votes (13.3%) in the constituency section and 6,062,962 (11.37%) in the party lists. This continues a new wave of support that was also evident in the 2013 Tokyo metropolitan election where the party doubled its representation. Fighting on a platform directly opposed to neoliberalism, the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), attempts to rewrite the constitution, US military bases on Japanese soil and opposition to nuclear power, the JCP tapped into a minority current that seeks an alternative to Japan’s rightward direction.[9]

Membership

As of 1 January 2014 the JCP has approximately 320,000 members. Following the party's advancement in the 2013 Tokyo prefectural election there has been an increase in membership growth, with over 1,000 people joining in each of the final three months of 2013.[1] Approximately 20% of new members during this period were aged 20–40, showing a higher ratio of young people joining the party than in the past.[1]

History

Kenji Miyamoto, held the party's leadership position from 1958 to 1982

The JCP was founded on 15 July 1922, as an underground political association. Outlawed at once under the Peace Preservation Law, the JCP was subjected to repression and persecution by the military and police of Imperial Japan. It was the only political party in Japan that opposed Japan's involvement in World War II. The party was legalised during the U.S. occupation of Japan in 1945, and since then has been a legal political party able to contest elections. In 1949, the party made unprecedented gains. It won 10 percent of the vote and sent 35 representatives to the Diet. But early in 1950, the Soviet Union sharply criticized the JCP's parliamentary strategy. Stalin insisted that the JCP pursue more militant, even violent, actions. SCAP seized this occasion to engineer the Red Purge, which forced the party leaders underground. Then, after the Korean War broke out, the party staged some acts of terrorism or sabotage. This resulted in a loss of popular confidence. Through the end of the decade, it never won more than three percent of the votes or two seats in the Diet. Even so, its strong support among many intellectuals gave it a relatively greater importance than these numbers suggest.

The party did not take sides during the Sino-Soviet split of the 1960s. In the mid-1960s, the U.S. State Department estimated the party membership to be approximately 120,000 (0.2% of the working age population).[10]

Lam Peng Er argued in Pacific Affairs in 1996 that "the JCP's viability is crucial to the health of Japanese democracy." This, he says, is because:

It is the only established party in parliament that has not been coopted by the conservative parties. It performs the watchdog role against the ruling parties without fear or favor. More importantly, the JCP often offers the only opposition candidate in prefectural governorship, city mayoral and other local elections. Despite the ostensible differences between the non-Communist parties at the national level, they often support a joint candidate for governor or mayor so that all parties are assured of being part of the ruling coalition. If the JCP did not offer a candidate, there would be a walkover and Japanese voters would be offered a fait accompli without an electoral avenue of protest. Promoting women candidates in elections to win women's votes is another characteristic of the party. More women are elected under the Communist label than other political parties in Japan.[11]

In 2008, foreign media recorded an increase in support for the party due to the effect of the global financial crisis on Japanese workers.[12][13] However, the party failed to increase its number of seats in the 2009 general election. Subsequently the projected decline of the party was halted, with the JCP becoming the third largest party in the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly[14][15] and making gains in the House of Councillors, moving from six to 11 seats. They surged forward in the 2014 elections, receiving 7,040,130 votes (13.3%) in the constituency section and 6,062,962 (11.37%) in the party lists.

Policies

One of the JCP's main objectives is terminating the Japan–U.S. military alliance and the dismantling of all U.S. military bases in Japan. It wants to make Japan a non-aligned and neutral country, in accordance with its principles of self-determination and national sovereignty. (In Japan there are about 130 U.S. military bases and other related facilities, Okinawa having the largest U.S. military base in Asia).

With regards to Japan's own military forces, the JCP's current policy is that it is not principally opposed to its existence (in 2000, it decided that it will agree to its use should Japan ever be attacked), but that it will seek to abolish it in the long term, international situation permitting.

The JCP also opposes possession of nuclear weapons by any country or the concept of military blocs, and opposes any attempt to revise Article 9 of the Constitution of Japan, which says that "never again …... [Japan] be visited with the horrors of war through the action of government". Regarding the resolution of disputes, it argues that priority must be given to peaceful means through negotiations, not to military solutions. The JCP says that Japan must adhere to the U.N. Charter.

The JCP adheres to the idea that Japan as an Asian country must stop putting emphasis on diplomacy centering on relations with the United States and the G8 Summit, and put Asian diplomacy at the center of its foreign relations. It supports Japan establishing an "independent foreign policy in the interests of the Japanese people," and rejects "uncritically following any foreign power".

The JCP advocates that Japan issue further apologies for its actions during World War II and has condemned prime-ministerial visits to Yasukuni Shrine.[16] In the 1930s, while the JCP was still illegal, it was the only political party to actively oppose Japan's war with China and World War II. Despite this, however, the JCP supports the territorial claims by Japan in the Kuril and Senkaku Islands and Liancourt Rocks disputes. Furthermore, the JCP has condemned North Korea's nuclear-weapons testing, calling for effective sanctions but opposing the prospect of a military response.[17]

The JCP has traditionally been opposed to the existence of the Imperial House since the pre-war days. From 2004,[8] it has acknowledged the Emperor as Japan's head of state as long as he remains a figurehead. JCP has stated that if the party comes to power, it will not ask the Emperor to abdicate; it is also against Japan's use of its national flag and national anthem which it sees as a relic of Japan's militarist past.

The JCP also strives to change the nation's economic policy of what it sees as serving the interests of large corporations and banks to one of "defending the interests of the people," and to establish "democratic rules" that will check the activities of large corporations and "protect the lives and basic rights of the people."

Regarding the issue of the international economy, the JCP has advocated establishing a new international democratic economic order on the basis of respect for the economic sovereignty of each country and strongly opposes the participation to the TPP. The JCP sees the United States, transnational corporations and international financial capital as pushing globalization, which, it says, is seriously affecting the global economy, including the monetary and financial problems, as well as North-South and environmental problems. The JCP advocates "democratic regulation of activities by transnational corporations and international financial capital on an international scale."

The JCP stance on international terrorism is that only by "encircling the forces of terror through strong international solidarity with the United Nations at the center" can terrorism be eliminated. It argues that waging war as a response to terrorism "produces a rift and contradictions in international solidarity, which instead expands the breeding ground of terrorism."

The JCP supports the legalization of civil unions for same-sex couples.[18]

In September 2015 after the passage of the 2015 Japanese military legislation, the JCP called for cooperation from other opposition parties to form an interim government to abolish the bills. It was the first time the party had called for such cooperation with other parties.[19][20][21][22]

Organization

Press

Shimbun Akahata (English: Red Flag Newspaper) is the daily organ of the JCP in the form of a national newspaper. Several other newspapers preceded and merged into Red Flag, including Daini Musansha Shinbun (English: The Second Proletarian News), which was merged into Red Flag in 1932.[23] Daini Musansha Shinbun was itself the immediate successor to the original The Proletarian News, which was banned by the government in September 1929.[23] (Daini Musansha Shinbun began publication immediately after the ban.[23])

In the past the party published numerous other newspapers as well, including another national paper called Nihon Seiji Shinbun (English: Japan Political News) and a theoretical journal called Zenshin (English: Forward.[24]) The party also published several regional newspapers such as Class War in and around Kyoto, Osaka, and Kobe, Shinetsu Red Flag in Nagano, and Hokkaido News in Hokkaido.[25] They also published numerous (the exact number is unknown) factory newspapers.[26]

Some regional newspapers, such as Shin Kanagawa (English: New Kanagawa) in Kanagawa, are still published.[27]

Affiliated organizations

The youth wing of JCP is the Democratic Youth League of Japan. In the 1920s and 1930s the organization published several newspapers of its own, including Reinen Seinen (English: Lenin Youth) and Proletarian Youth.[23]

The party also has affiliate medical and consumer co-ops.[28] The Japanese Consumers' Co-Operative Union (JCCU), the umbrella body of the co-operative movement in Japan, has a sizable number of communists in its ranks, although the exact numbers are difficult to verify.[28] Another example of the JCP's prevalence in the co-operative movement is the Co-op Kanagawa in the Kanagawa Prefecture, which has 800,000 members and has historical ties to the JCP.[28] It still advertises and occasionally is published in JCP newspapers such as Red Flag and New Kanagawa.[28] The prevalence of house unions in Japan as opposed to enterprise unions has prompted much of the exceptional development of other organizations by the JCP, as well as causing the JCP to seek other external organizational support, including from kōenkai.[28]

Notable members

Takiji Kobayashi, prominent author of proletarian literature

Pre-war

Wartime

Post-war

House of Representatives (Lower House)

Note: Prior to 1996 the entire House of Representatives was elected via proportional lists, and after 1996 the majority of members of the House of Representatives (currently 295 of 475) are elected via local single-member FPTP districts, not the regional PR blocks (which elect the other 180 seats.) Voters have one vote in their FPTP district, and one in their PR block. Thus the votes and vote percentages in the table below are the JCP's overall vote totals from before 1993, and just the proportional lists after 1996.

House of Representatives
Election year # of votes % of vote Total seats ±
1946 2,135,757 3.8
6 / 464
1947 1,002,883 3.7
4 / 466
Decrease2
1949 2,984,780 9.8
35 / 466
Increase31
1952 896,765 2.5
0 / 466
Decrease35
1953 655,990 1.9
1 / 466
Increase1
1955 733,121 2.0
2 / 467
Increase1
1958 1,012,035 2.5
1 / 467
Decrease1
1960 1,156,723 2.9
3 / 467
Increase2
1963 1,646,477 4.0
5 / 467
Increase2
1967 2,190,564 4.8
5 / 486
Steady0
1969 3,199,032 6.8
14 / 486
Increase9
1972 5,496,827 10.5
38 / 491
Increase24
1976 5,878,192 10.4
17 / 511
Decrease21
1979 5,625,527 10.4
39 / 511
Increase22
1980 5,803,613 9.8
29 / 511
Decrease10
1983 5,302,485 9.3
26 / 511
Decrease3
1986 5,313,246 8.8
26 / 512
Steady0
1990 5,226,987 8.0
16 / 512
Decrease10
1993 4,834,587 7.7
15 / 511
Decrease1
1996 7,268,743 13.1
26 / 500
Increase11
2000 6,719,016 11.2
20 / 480
Decrease6
2003 4,586,172 7.8
9 / 480
Decrease11
2005 4,919,187 7.3
9 / 480
Steady0
2009 4,943,886 7.0
9 / 480
Steady0
2012 3,689,159 6.2
8 / 480
Decrease1
2014 6,062,962 11.4
21 / 475
Increase13

House of Councillors (Upper House)

Note: The majority of members of the House of Councillors (currently 146 of 242) is elected in the prefectural SNTV districts, not in the national PR district (until 1980: national SNTV district). Members of the House of Councillors are elected to staggered six year terms. Every three years half the house is up for election. The seats totals show below are the JCP's overall post-election seat totals, not just their seats elected in that particular year.

Election year National district votes Total
# of votes % of votes Seats ±
1947 610,948 2.9
4 / 250
1950 1,333,872 4.8
4 / 260
Steady0
1953 293,877 1.1
2 / 260
-22
1956 599,254 2.1
2 / 254
Steady0
1959 551,916 1.9
3 / 254
11
1962 1,123,947 3.1
4 / 254
11
1965 1,652,364 4.4
6 / 254
22
1968 2,146,879 5.0
7 / 251
11
1971 3,219,307 8.1
10 / 251
33
1974 4,931,650 9.4
19 / 260
99
1977
16 / 252
-33
1980
12 / 252
-44
1983
14 / 252
22
1986 5,430,838 9.5
16 / 252
22
1989
14 / 252
-12
1992
11 / 252
-33
1995
14 / 252
33
1998
23 / 252
99
2001 4,329,210 7.9
20 / 247
-33
2004 4,363,107 7.8
9 / 242
-1111
2007 4,407,937 7.5
7 / 242
-22
2010 3,563,556 6.1
6 / 242
-11
2013 5,154,055 9.7
11 / 242
55

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c "Japanese Communist Party seeing sharp increase in new, young members (in English)". Mainichi Shimbun. 7 January 2014. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Japan Working Paper No. 67: The Japanese Communist Party and Its Transformations (in English)". Japan Policy Research Institute. May 2000. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  3. ^ "Japan's persistent pacifism (in English)". East Asia Forum. 24 October 2013. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  4. ^ a b Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications: Prefectural and local assembly members and governors/mayors by political party as of December 31, 2011
  5. ^ a b JCP website reporting on how many seats they won in the first half of the 2015 local elections: Prefectural and local assembly members and governors/mayors by political party as of April 14, 2015
  6. ^ JCP website reporting on how many seats they won in the first half of the 2015 local elections: Prefectural and local assembly members and governors/mayors by political party as of April 28, 2015
  7. ^ "List of Members of the House of Councillors". www.sangiin.go.jp. 2013-08-01. Retrieved 2013-08-02.
  8. ^ a b The Daily Yomiuri JCP struggling to become relevant July 16 2012 Retrieved on July 12, 2012
  9. ^ http://www.communist-party.org.uk/international/analysis-a-briefings/1889-kenny-coyle-japanese-communists-surpass-10-per-cent-vote.html
  10. ^ Benjamin, Roger W.; Kautsky, John H.. Communism and Economic Development, in The American Political Science Review, Vol. 62, No. 1. (March 1968), pp. 122.
  11. ^ Er, Lam Peng. The Japanese Communist Party: Organization and Resilience in the Midst of Adversity - in Pacific Affairs, Vol. 69, No. 3. (Autumn, 1996), pp. 362-363.
  12. ^ "Japan's young turn to Communist Party as they decide capitalism has let them down", Daily Telegraph, October 18, 2008.
  13. ^ "Communism on rise in recession-hit Japan", BBC News, May 4, 2009.
  14. ^ http://www.jcp.or.jp/english/jps_2013/20130516_09i.html
  15. ^ http://blogs.wsj.com/japanrealtime/2013/07/22/japan-communists-celebrate-a-little-victory/?mod=WSJBlog&utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
  16. ^ "JCP Chair Shii comments on Abe's shrine visit". Japanese Communist Party. 26 December 2013. Retrieved 2 April 2014.
  17. ^ "Shii comments on DPRK nuclear test". Japanese Communist Party. 16 February 2013. 2 April 2014.
  18. ^ Inada, Miho; Dvorak, Phred. "Same-Sex Marriage in Japan: A Long Way Away?". The Wall Street Journal. September 20, 2013. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  19. ^ Shii, Kazuo We Call For Establishing a “National Coalition Government to Repeal the War (Security) Legislation” September 19, 2015 Retrieved September 29, 2015
  20. ^ JCP proposes establishing a national coalition gov’t to repeal war legislation September 20, 2015 Japan Press Weekly Retrieved September 29, 2015
  21. ^ JCP seeks cooperation from opposition parties on new security laws September 21, 2015 Japan Times Retrieved September 29, 2015
  22. ^ Two opposition parties to mull coalition talks with JCP September 28, 2015 Japan Times Retrieved September 29, 2015
  23. ^ a b c d Beckmann, G. M. & Genji, O (1969) The Japanese Communist Party 1922-1945, p188
  24. ^ Beckmann, G. M. & Genji, O (1969) The Japanese Communist Party 1922-1945, p250
  25. ^ Beckmann, G. M. & Genji, O (1969) The Japanese Communist Party 1922-1945, pp138-139
  26. ^ Beckmann, G. M. & Genji, O (1969) The Japanese Communist Party 1922-1945, p152
  27. ^ Lam Peng-Er (1999) Green Politics in Japan, p63
  28. ^ a b c d e Lam Peng-Er (1999) Green Politics in Japan, pp62-64

Further reading

  • Sen Katayama, The Labor Movement in Japan. Chicago, IL: Charles H. Kerr & Co., 1918.
  • Roth, Andrew (1945). Dilemma in Japan. Little, Brown.
  • R. Swearingen and P. Langer, Red Flag in Japan: International Communism in Action, 1919-1951. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1952.
  • T.E. Durkee, The Communist Party of Japan, 1919-1932. PhD dissertation. Stanford University, 1953.
  • Robert A. Scalapino, The Japanese Communist Movement: 1920-1966. London: Cambridge University Press. 1967.
  • George M. Beckmann and Genji Okubo. The Japanese Communist Party, 1922-1945. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1969.
  • Hong M. Kim, Deradicalization of the Japanese Communist Party Under Kenji Miyamoto. Cambridge University Press, 1976.
  • Stephen S. Large, The Romance of Revolution in Japanese Anarchism and Communism during the Taishō Period. Cambridge University Press, 1977.
  • G.A. Hoston, Marxism and the Crisis of Development in Prewar Japan. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1986.
  • Tim Rees and Andrew Thorpe, International Communism and the Communist International, 1919-43. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1998.
  • Louise Young (1999). Japan's Total Empire: Manchuria and the Culture of Wartime Imperialism. University of California Press.
  • Sandra Wilson (August 27, 2003). The Manchurian Crisis and Japanese Society, 1931-33. Routledge.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: year (link)
  • Takemae, Eiji (2003). Allied Occupation of Japan. A&C Black. p. 240.
  • Josephine Fowler, Japanese and Chinese Immigrant Activists: Organizing in American and International Communist Movements, 1919-1933. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2007.