Shinzō Abe I cabinet (remodeling)

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Shinzō Abe I cabinet (remodeling)
90th Japanese Cabinet (reshuffle)
dai-90-dai naikaku (kaizō)
The cabinet after the inauguration ceremony for the ministers
Prime Minister
Naikaku Sōri-Daijin
Shinzo Abe
Legislative period 168. Kokkai
(44th Shūgiin , 21st Sangiin )
Appointed by Emperor Akihito
education August 27, 2007
The End September 26, 2007
Duration 0 years and 30 days
predecessor Cabinet Shinzō Abe I
successor Yasuo Fukuda's cabinet
composition
Party (s) LDP - Kōmeitō coalition government
ji-kō renritsu seiken
minister 18 (1 resignation)
State Secretaries 2 Special Advisers to the Prime Minister
3 Parliamentary Vice-Heads of the Cabinet Secretariat
24 "Vice Ministers"
27 "Parliamentary Secretaries"
representation
Shūgiin
336/480

(25.9.2007)
Sangiin
105/242

(August 31, 2007)
Opposition leader Ichirō Ozawa (Shūgiin, DPJ )

The reshaped Abe cabinet ruled Japan under the leadership of Prime Minister Shinzō Abe from August 27, 2007 to September 26, 2007. On July 29, 2007, Abes had a coalition of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and Kōmeitō in the election for Sangiin , the upper house lost the majority to the opposition following the impression of several ministerial resignations, donation and pension scandals. Government work became more difficult because of the so-called “twisted parliament” ( Nejire Kokkai ), in which the two chambers of parliament were controlled by different parties. It is true that Abes' coalition in the Shūgiin , the lower house, had a two-thirds majority, which enabled the Sangiin to be outvoted. However, important legislative proposals were delayed, and the LDP began calling for Abe to resign. After a trip to South and Southeast Asia, Abe reshuffled his cabinet on August 27 and filled the leadership positions of the LDP. The formal appointment of the ministers of state in the imperial residence took place on the evening of the same day.

Four ministers (Amari, Ibuki, Fuyushiba, Ōta) kept their posts. Yoshimi Watanabe was still a member of the cabinet in a new role; the responsibilities of some ministers of state have been redesigned. The previous Foreign Minister Tarō Asō changed as General Secretary to the LDP leadership.

After another ministerial resignation and new admissions by two ministers of false reports on political donations, Abe announced on September 9 that he would step down if the anti-terrorism law had left Japan on Operation Enduring Freedom on a refueling mission in the Indian Ocean participates, is not extended in time. Just three days later, on September 12th, he announced his resignation in order to break the political blockade and allow the law to be extended. - It was unclear whether the domestic political blockade or rather Abe's state of health or internal party rivalries were decisive for his resignation. The resulting early election of the LDP chairman on September 23 decided Yasuo Fukuda ( Machimura faction ) against Tarō Asō ( Asō faction ) for themselves. Fukuda was elected Prime Minister in parliament on September 25, against the Sangiin's vote, and the new cabinet was formally appointed on September 26.

Minister of State

Abe cabinet after reshuffle - from August 27, 2007 to resignation on September 26, 2007
Office Surname image chamber fraction Faction
prime minister Shinzo Abe Shinzo Abe Shūgiin LDP ( Machimura )
Minister of Internal Affairs and Communication
Minister of State for the Cabinet Office
    responsible for regional reform, post-privatization
Hiroya Masuda Hiroya Masuda  - - -
Minister of Justice Kunio Hatoyama Kunio Hatoyama  Shūgiin LDP Tsushima
Foreign minister Nobutaka Machimura Machimura Nobutaka Shūgiin LDP Machimura
Finance minister Fukushirō Nukaga Fukushirō Nukaga  Shūgiin LDP Tsushima
Minister for Education, Culture, Sport, Science and Technology Bunmei Ibuki Bunmei Ibuki  Shūgiin LDP Ibuki
Minister for Health, Labor and Social Affairs Yōichi Masuzoe Yōichi Masuzoe  Sangiin LDP -
Minister for Agriculture, Forests and Fisheries Takehiko Endō
until September 3, 2007
Takehiko Endo  Shūgiin LDP Yamasaki
Akira Amari
temporarily
Akira Amari  Shūgiin LDP Yamasaki
Masatoshi Wakabayashi
from September 4th 2007
Masatoshi Wakabayashi Sangiin LDP Machimura
Minister for Economy, Trade and Industry Akira Amari Akira Amari  Shūgiin LDP Yamasaki
Minister of Land, Infrastructure and Transport
   zust. for tourism and maritime affairs
Tetsuzō Fuyushiba Tetsuzō Fuyushiba Shūgiin Kōmeitō -
Environment Minister
   zust. for global environmental issues
Ichirō Kamoshita Ichirō Kamoshita  Shūgiin LDP Tsushima
Defense Minister Masahiko Kōmura Masahiko Kōmrua Shūgiin LDP Kōmura
Chief Cabinet Secretary
    att. for the kidnapping issue
Kaoru Yosano Kaoru Yosano Shūgiin LDP -
Chairman of the National Public Security Commission,
Minister of State for Civil Protection, Food Safety
Shin'ya Izumi Shin'ya Izumi  Sangiin LDP Nikai
Secretary of State for Okinawa and Northern Territories Affairs , Deregulation,
    Quality of Life, Science and Technology
Fumio Kishida Fumio Kishida Shūgiin LDP Koga
Minister of State for the Financial Sector Yoshimi Watanabe Yoshimi Watanabe  Shūgiin LDP -
Minister of State for Economic and Tax Policy Hiroko Ōta Hiroko Ōta - - -
Minister of State for Combating the Decline in Births and for Gender Equality Yōko Kamikawa Yōko Kamikawa Shūgiin LDP Koga

Note: The Prime Minister does not officially belong to any political group during his term of office.

Resignations

  • Agriculture Minister Endo resigned because of a scandal surrounding misused subsidies.
  • Prime Minister Abe announced his resignation on September 12, 2007.

swell

Individual evidence

  1. No Surprises. Abe Taps Faction Veterans for Cabinet. In: The Japan Times . August 28, 2007, accessed December 6, 2009 .
  2. ^ Abe Stakes His Job on Extension of Refueling Mission. In: The Japan Times . September 10, 2007, accessed December 6, 2009 .
  3. Chris Hogg: What Led Shinzo Abe to Resign? In: BBC News . September 12, 2007, accessed November 22, 2011 .
  4. Endo to Quit over Subsidy Scandal. In: Japan Times. September 3, 2007, accessed March 1, 2008 .
  5. Japanese Prime Minister Resigns. In: BBC News. September 12, 2007, accessed March 1, 2008 .
  6. Abe Announces He Will Resign. In: The Japan Times . September 12, 2007, accessed November 22, 2011 .