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Second Kishida Cabinet (First Reshuffle)

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Second Kishida Cabinet (First Reshuffle)

101st Cabinet of Japan
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (front row, centre) with the newly-formed cabinet inside the Kantei, 10 August 2022
Date formed10 August 2022
Date dissolved13 September 2023
People and organisations
EmperorNaruhito
Prime MinisterFumio Kishida
Prime Minister's historyMember of the HoR for Hiroshima 1st district (1993-)
Former Foreign Minister (2012-2017)
Former acting Minister of Defense (2017)
No. of ministers20 (2022-)
Member party  Liberal Democratic
  Komeito Coalition
Status in legislatureHoR (Lower):
LDP-K Coalition majority
293 / 465 (63%)

HoC (Upper):
LDP-K Coalition majority
142 / 245 (58%)
Opposition party  Constitutional Democratic Party
Opposition leaderKenta Izumi (2021-present)
History
Elections2021/49th HoR general election
2022/26th HoC regular election
Legislature terms206th– National Diet
(49th HoR, 25th– HoC)
PredecessorSecond Kishida Cabinet
SuccessorSecond Kishida Cabinet (Second Reshuffle)

The Second Kishida Cabinet (First Reshuffle) was the 101st Cabinet of Japan and was formed by Fumio Kishida, leader of the Liberal Democratic Party and Prime Minister of Japan in August 2022. The cabinet governed Japan from 10 August 2022 to 13 September 2023.

The government was a coalition between the Liberal Democratic Party and the Komeito and controlled both the upper and lower houses of the National Diet. It succeeded the Second Kishida Cabinet on 10 August 2022.[1] The Reshuffled 101st Cabinet was formed following the assassination of Shinzo Abe, the former Prime Minister, which caused low approval ratings due to alleged ties to the Unification Church.[2]

Background

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Announcement

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On 6 August 2022 in Hiroshima, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced his decision to reshuffle his second cabinet on 10 August, after attending the 77th anniversary memorial ceremony of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by American jet. The reshuffle had previously been planned for early September 2022. Since the end of COVID-19 pandemic in Japan by October 2021, Kishida explained that the purpose of the reshuffle was to focus on issues like the assassination of Shinzo Abe, as well as the climate change, global inflation, Russian invasion of Ukraine, and Taiwan Strait tensions.[3]

Controversies between Abe and the Unification Church

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The reshuffle was widely reported as a response to the local criticism of ties between Kishida's Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the Unification Church (UC), following the assassination of the former prime minister, Shinzo Abe, on 8 July 2022.[3][4] The suspected shooter, Tetsuya Yamagami, revealed that his mother went bankrupt for donating most of the family's wealth and assets to the UC. Although the suspect originally planned to target the leader of the UC, Hak Ja Han, he switched to Abe because he was unable to approach Han, and he considered Abe as one of the most influential supporters of the UC.[5] The revelation renewed local interest in the allegedly long-standing relationship between the LDP and the UC since Abe's maternal grandfather Nobusuke Kishi's tenure,[6] as well as accusations against the UC's practices of collecting donations fraudulently, so-called "spiritual sales".[7] Public opinions on Kishida's decision to hold a state funeral for Abe on 27 September were also divided.[8][9]

According to a poll conducted by NHK from 5 to 7 August, the approval rating of Kishida's previous cabinet was 46%, down by 13% from a similar poll taken three weeks prior. Also 82% of respondents were not satisfied by the lawmakers' explanations of their ties to the UC.[10]

Kishida's responses regarding the Unification Church

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Kishida stressed that the new cabinet would have all members closely examined with regard to their relationship with the UC,[3] but media reported that at least 30 members in the reshuffled cabinet were still related to the UC to various degrees.[11] One of the ministers who remained in office after this reshuffle, Daishiro Yamagiwa, received media scrutiny in particular for not disclosing his ties with the UC to the public before the reshuffle, as well as his ambiguous responses when being confronted by reporters about his ties to the UC.[12] Kishida accepted Yamagiwa's resignation on 24 October 2022 as the minister[13] following more evidences of Yamagiwa's ties to the UC surfaced and intense criticisms from the opposition parties in the parliament for his failure to remember his participation in events held by the UC and meetings with top UC officials, including the UC leader Hak Ja Han.[14]

After the cabinet reshuffle, a poll conducted from 20 to 21 August by Mainichi Shimbun showed that the approval rating of the new cabinet dropped to 36% by 16%, with 64% of respondents viewing the ties to the UC as a very serious problem.[15]

Kishida promised to cut ties with the UC[16] and help victims of manipulative sales by the UC.[17] Taro Kono, the minister of digital affairs who was also given the special mission for consumer affairs and food safety, established a spiritual sales review committee in the Consumer Affairs Agency on 29 August. This committee initially elected 8 experts in the UC matter including former prosecutor Shiori Kanno and Masaki Kito, a lawyer representing the National Network of Lawyers Against Spiritual Sales which has been providing legal aid for victims and reporting on the anti-social issues of the UC since 1987.[18] The committee was scheduled to hold publicly-viewable weekly online meetings. All committee members offered suggestions for strengthening regulations or enacting preventive measures against spiritual sales.[19]

Increase in military budget

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In December 2022 the Kishida government announced a $320bn increase in military spending, due in part to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[20][21]

Election of the prime minister

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List of ministers

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Parties
Liberal Democratic
Komeito
R Member of the House of Representatives
C Member of the House of Councillors
B Bureaucrat

Cabinet

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Citation of this table: List of Second Kishida Cabinet (First Reshuffle) Members[23]

Second Kishida Cabinet (First Reshuffle)
Portfolio Image Minister Term Note
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida R 4 October 2021 – Present
Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications Minoru Terada R 10 August 2022 – 20 November 2022 [24]
Takeaki Matsumoto R 21 November 2022 – 13 September 2023 [25]
Minister of Justice Yasuhiro Hanashi R 10 August 2022 – 11 November 2022
Ken Saitō R 11 November 2022 – 13 September 2023 [26]
Minister for Foreign Affairs Yoshimasa Hayashi R 10 November 2021 – 13 September 2023 [27]
Minister of Finance
Minister of State for Financial Services
Minister in charge of Overcoming Deflation
Shun'ichi Suzuki R 4 October 2021 – Present
Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
Minister in charge of Education Rebuilding
Keiko Nagaoka R 10 August 2022 – 13 September 2023
Minister of Health, Labour and Welfare Katsunobu Kato R 10 August 2022 – 13 September 2023
Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Tetsuro Nomura C 10 August 2022 – 13 September 2023
Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry
Minister in charge of Industrial Competitiveness
Minister for Economic Cooperation with Russia
Minister in charge of the Response to the Economic Impact caused by the Nuclear Accident
Minister of State for the Nuclear Damage Compensation and Decommissioning Facilitation Corporation
Yasutoshi Nishimura R 10 August 2022 – Present
Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism
Minister in charge of Water Cycle Policy
Minister for the World Horticultural Exhibition Yokohama 2027
Tetsuo Saito R 4 October 2021 – Present
Minister of the Environment
Minister of State for Nuclear Emergency Preparedness
Akihiro Nishimura R 10 August 2022 – 13 September 2023
Minister of Defense Yasukazu Hamada R 10 August 2022 – 13 September 2023
Chief Cabinet Secretary
Minister in charge of Mitigating the Impact of U.S. Forces in Okinawa
Minister in charge of the Abductions Issue
Minister in Charge of Promoting Vaccinations
Hirokazu Matsuno R 4 October 2021 – Present
Minister for Digital Transformation
Minister of State for Digital Reform
Minister of State for Consumer Affairs and Food Safety
Minister in charge of Civil Service Reform
Taro Kono R 10 August 2022 – Present
Minister of Reconstruction
Minister in charge of Comprehensive Policy Coordination for Revival from the Nuclear Accident at Fukushima
Kenya Akiba R 10 August 2022 – 27 December 2022 [28]
Hiromichi Watanabe R 27 December 2022 – 13 September 2023
Chairman of the National Public Safety Commission
Minister in charge of Building National Resilience
Minister in charge of Territorial Issues
Minister in charge of Civil Service Reform
Minister of State for Disaster Management and Ocean Policy
Koichi Tani R 10 August 2022 – 13 September 2023
Minister in charge of Policies Related to Children
Minister in charge of Cohesive Society
Minister in charge of Women's Empowerment
Minister in charge of Measures for Loneliness and Isolation
Minister of State for Measures for Declining Birthrate
Minister of State for Gender Equality
Masanobu Ogura R 10 August 2022 – 13 September 2023
Minister of State for Economic and Fiscal Policy
Minister in charge of Economic Revitalization
Minister in charge of New Capitalism
Minister in charge of Startups
Minister in charge of Measures for Novel Coronavirus Disease and Health Crisis Management
Minister in charge of Social Security Reform
Daishiro Yamagiwa R 10 August 2022 – 25 October 2022
Shigeyuki Goto R 25 October 2022 – 13 September 2023 [29]
Minister in charge of Economic Security
Minister of State for Intellectual Property Strategy
Minister of State for Science and Technology Policy
Minister of State for Space Policy
Minister of State for Economic Security
Sanae Takaichi R 10 August 2022 – Present
Minister of State for Okinawa and Northern Territories Affairs
Minister of State for Regional Revitalization
Minister of State for Regulatory Reform
Minister of State for "Cool Japan" Strategy
Minister of State for Ainu-Related Policies
Minister in charge of Digital Garden City Nation Vision
Minister for the World Expo 2025
Minister in charge of Administrative Reform
Naoki Okada C 10 August 2022 – 13 September 2023

Changes

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Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary and Director-General of the Cabinet Legislation Bureau

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Portfolio Image Deputy Minister Term Note
Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Seiji Kihara R 4 October 2021 – 13 September 2023
Yoshihiko Isozaki C 4 October 2021 – 13 September 2023
Shun'ichi Kuryu B 4 October 2021 – Present former: National Police Agency
Director-General of the Cabinet Legislation Bureau Masaharu Kondo B 11 September 2019 – Present former: the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry

Special advisors to the prime minister

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Portfolio Image Advisor Term Note
Special Advisor to the Prime Minister for National Security Important Policies, Nuclear Disarmament and Non-Proliferation Issues Nobuo Kishi R 10 August 2022 – 3 February 2023
Seiji Kihara R 3 February 2023 – 13 September 2023
Special Advisor to the Prime Minister for International Human Rights Problems Gen Nakatani R 10 November 2021 – 13 September 2023
Special Advisor to the Prime Minister for Domestic Economic and other special issues Hideki Murai R 8 October 2021 – 13 September 2023
Special Advisor to the Prime Minister for Women's Empowerment and LGBT rights Masako Mori C 10 November 2021 – 13 September 2023
Special Advisor to the Prime Minister for social infrastructure development such as national resilience and reconstruction, science and technology innovation policy and other special assignments Masafumi Mori B 1 January 2022 – Present
State ministers[30]
Portfolio State Minister Term Note
State Minister of Digital Agency Masaki Ōgushi R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Cabinet Office
State Minister for Reconstruction Toshifumi Kojima R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Toshiko Takeya C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Hiroo Ishii C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, the State Minister of Cabinet Office
State Minister of Cabinet Office Masaki Ōgushi R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Digital Agency
Satoshi Fujimaru R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Tsuyoshi Hoshino R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Yoshiaki Wada R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Shin'ichi Isa R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Health, Labour and Welfare
Shin'ichi Nakatani R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry
Fusae Ohta C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry
Hiroo Ishii C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, the State Minister for Reconstruction
Shigeki Kobayashi R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Environment
Toshirō Ino R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Defense
State Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications Asako Omi R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Yoshifumi Tsuge C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
State Minister of Justice Hiroaki Kadoyama R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
State Minister for Foreign Affairs Shunsuke Takei R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Kenji Yamada R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
State Minister of Finance Takahiro Inoue R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Kōzō Akino C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
State Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Yōsei Ide R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Kazuo Yana R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
State Minister of Health, Labour and Welfare Shun Hanyūda C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Shin'ichi Isa R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Cabinet Office
State Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Takaaki Katsumata R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Atsushi Nonaka R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
State Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Shin'ichi Nakatani R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Cabinet Office
Fusae Ohta C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Cabinet Office
State Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism Toshirō Toyoda C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Hiroo Ishii C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister for Reconstruction and the State Minister of Cabinet Office
State Minister of Environment Miki Yamada R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Shigeki Kobayashi R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Cabinet Office
State Minister of Defense Toshirō Ino R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the State Minister of Cabinet Office

Parliamentary vice-ministers

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Parliamentary vice-ministers[30]
Portfolio Parliamentary Vice-Minister Term Note
Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Digital Agency Masanao Ozaki R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Cabinet Office
Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Reconstruction Hideyuki Nakano R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Cabinet Office
Sakon Yamamoto R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
Ryūji Satomi C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry and the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Cabinet Office
Shōji Nishida R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism and the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Cabinet Office
Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Cabinet Office Masanao Ozaki R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Digital Agency
Eikei Suzuki R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Hanako Jimi C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Hideyuki Nakano R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Reconstruction
Akiko Honda C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Health, Labour and Welfare
Makoto Nagamine C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry
Ryūji Satomi C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry, the Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Reconstruction
Shōji Nishida R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, the Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Reconstruction
Akira Yanagimoto R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Environment
Jirō Kimura R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Defense
Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications Ayano Kunimitsu R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Mio Sugita R 12 August 2022 – 27 December 2022
Junji Hasegawa R 27 December 2022 – 15 September 2023
Takamoto Nakagawa R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Justice Yasuhiro Takami R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs Masatoshi Akimoto R 12 August 2022 –
4 August 2023
Kei Takagi R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Yūmi Yoshikawa C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Finance Shunpei Kaneko R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Shūji Miyamoto C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Takae Itō C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Sakon Yamamoto R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Reconstruction
Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Health, Labour and Welfare Shōgo Azemoto R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Akiko Honda C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Cabinet Office
Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Hideo Tsunoda R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Shin'ya Fujiki C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Makoto Nagamine C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Cabinet Office
Ryūji Satomi C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Reconstruction and the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Cabinet Office
Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism Yasushi Furukawa R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Masato Shimizu C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Shōji Nishida R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of for Reconstruction and the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Cabinet Office
Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Environment Isato Kunisada R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Akira Yanagimoto R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Cabinet Office
Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Defense Kimi Onoda C 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023
Jirō Kimura R 12 August 2022 – 15 September 2023 also serves as the Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Cabinet Office

References

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  1. ^ "Japan's Kishida revamps Cabinet as public support slips". Kyodo News. 10 August 2022.
  2. ^ "Japan PM purges Cabinet after support falls over church ties". Associated Press. 10 August 2022. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  3. ^ a b c "PM Kishida announced cabinet and personnel reshuffle to be carried out on 10th" 岸田首相、内閣改造と自民党役員人事を正式表明 10日にも実施へ, Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese), 6 August 2022, archived from the original on 8 August 2022, retrieved 27 August 2022
  4. ^ Why a church has become a headache for Japan's prime minister, 16 August 2022, retrieved 27 August 2022 – via YouTube {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |agency= ignored (help)
  5. ^ "'My entire life has been being distorted' details on the letter of the suspect Yamagami" 「私の一生を歪ませ続けた」 山上容疑者の手紙詳報, The Sankei News (in Japanese), 17 July 2022, retrieved 27 August 2022
  6. ^ "List of lawmakers with ties to the Unification Church obtained! Including 34 people holding important positions in the successive administrations" 旧統一教会と「関係アリ」国会議員リスト入手! 歴代政権の重要ポスト経験者が34人も. Nikkan Gendai (in Japanese). 16 July 2022. Retrieved 27 August 2022.
  7. ^ Fisher, Mark (12 July 2022). "How Abe and Japan became vital to Moon's Unification Church". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 13 July 2022.
  8. ^ "50% thought it was a 'good' decision to hold a state funeral for Abe. Opinions were sharply divided by age group with the younger generation being supportive by FNN Opinion Poll" 安倍元首相の国葬決定「よかった」50%…世代で逆転する評価 目立つ「若者の支持」 FNN世論調査, Fuji News Network (in Japanese), 25 July 2022, archived from the original on 30 July 2022, retrieved 27 August 2022
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  12. ^ "山際大臣"旧統一教会問題"こじらせで更迭論強まるも…岸田首相は切るも地獄、続けるも地獄", Nikkan Gendai (in Japanese), 4 September 2022, retrieved 4 September 2022 – via Yahoo News
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  14. ^ "接点次々発覚の山際大臣を事実上の更迭 旧統一教会問題での辞任は初 水面下で辞任話も...なぜこのタイミング?", Tokyo Broadcasting System (in Japanese), 25 October 2022, retrieved 25 October 2022
  15. ^ "Approval rating of the cabinet plunged to 36% by 13%, the lowest since its inauguration by Mainichi Shimbun Opinion Poll" 内閣支持率16ポイント急落36% 発足以降で最低 毎日新聞世論調査, Mainichi Shimbun (in Japanese), 21 August 2022, retrieved 25 August 2022
  16. ^ "Thoroughly break off with the Unification Church. 'We accept criticisms from the public' said PM Kishida" 旧統一教会、関係断絶を徹底 「国民からさまざま指摘」 岸田首相, Jiji Press (in Japanese), 22 August 2022, retrieved 27 August 2022 – via Yahoo News
  17. ^ "PM Kishida said to help victims of the Unification Church. 'We will deal with it flexibly from the standpoint of the public'" 岸田総理 旧統一教会の被害者救済「国民の立場に立って柔軟に対応を」, Tokyo Broadcasting System (in Japanese), 22 August 2022, retrieved 27 August 2022 – via Yahoo News
  18. ^ "Lawyers Kito and Shiori Kanno are in the spiritual sales review committee of the Consumer Affairs Agency" 消費者庁の霊感商法検討会、委員に紀藤弁護士や菅野志桜里氏, The Sankei Shimbun (in Japanese), 26 August 2022, retrieved 27 August 2022
  19. ^ "紀藤弁護士「省庁横断できないなら特命大臣置くべき」消費者庁の霊感商法対策会議がスタート", Bengo4.com (in Japanese), 29 August 2022, retrieved 29 August 2022 – via Yahoo News
  20. ^ "Pacifist Japan unveils unprecedented $320bn military build-up". Al Jazeera Media Network. 16 December 2022.
  21. ^ Kelly, Tim; Murakami, Sakura (16 December 2022). "Pacifist Japan unveils biggest military build-up since World War Two". Reuters.
  22. ^ a b "第101代総理大臣に岸田文雄氏 衆・参本会議の指名選挙で選出". NHK. 10 November 2021. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  23. ^ "List of Ministers". The Cabinet of Japan Prime Minister. 10 November 2021. Archived from the original on 11 November 2021. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
  24. ^ "Japan PM sacks scandal-hit internal affairs minister amid pressure". Kyodo News. 20 November 2022. Retrieved 20 November 2022.
  25. ^ a b "PM Kishida taps Takeaki Matsumoto as new internal affairs minister". Kyodo News. 21 November 2022. Retrieved 21 November 2022.
  26. ^ a b "Japan's justice minister dismissed over gaffes about death penalty". Kyodo News. 11 November 2022. Retrieved 11 November 2022.
  27. ^ "PM Kishida to appoint Hayashi as foreign minister | NHK WORLD-JAPAN News". NHK WORLD. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
  28. ^ a b "Reconstruction minister to be dismissed in blow to Kishida Cabinet". Kyodo News. 27 December 2022. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  29. ^ "Ex-Japan health minister Goto replaces church-linked economy chief". Kyodo News. 25 October 2022. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
  30. ^ a b "第2次岸田改造内閣 副大臣26人 政務官28人決まる" (in Japanese). NHK. 12 August 2022. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
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Pages at the Prime Minister's Official Residence of Japan (English website):