Cabinet Noda
Cabinet Noda | |
---|---|
95th Japanese cabinet dai-95-dai naikaku |
|
Prime Minister Naikaku Sōri-Daijin |
Yoshihiko Noda |
Legislative period | 178-179. NV (45th Abg . House , 22nd Senate ) |
Appointed by | Emperor Akihito |
education | September 2, 2011 |
The End | January 13, 2012 |
Duration | 0 years and 133 days |
predecessor | Cabinet Kan (2nd reshuffle) |
successor | Cabinet Noda (1st transformation) |
composition | |
Party (s) | DPJ , NVP |
minister | 19th |
State Secretaries | 5 Special Advisers to the Prime Minister 3 Parliamentary Vice-Heads of the Cabinet Secretariat 22 "Vice Ministers" 27 "Parliamentary State Secretaries" |
representation | |
House of Representatives | 306/479 (5.9.2011) |
senate | 109/242 (12/1/2011) |
Opposition leader | Sadakazu Tanigaki (Ed., LDP ) |
The cabinet Noda ( Japanese 野 田 内閣 , Noda naikaku ) ruled Japan under the leadership of Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda from September 2, 2011 until a cabinet reshuffle on January 13, 2012 . Noda was elected party chairman on August 29 and prime minister on August 30. The previous Kan cabinet resigned on August 30th.
The coalition cabinet made up of the Democratic Party (DPJ) and the New People's Party (NVP) included 13 ministers of state from the Shūgiin , the lower house of the national parliament , and five from the Sangiin , the upper house. Under the catchphrase “party harmony” ( 党内 融和 , tōnai yūwa ), unlike the last time under Naoto Kan, politicians who were close to the former DPJ chairman Ichirō Ozawa were also taken into account when forming the government .
In January 2012, Noda replaced five ministers, including Kenji Yamaoka and Yasuo Ichikawa, who were affected by motions of no confidence by the Sangiin in December 2011, but carried out a formal cabinet reshuffle (formal resignation and new appointment of all ministers of state except the prime minister).
Then he formed the Noda Cabinet (1st reshuffle) (January 13, 2012 to June 4, 2012).
Then he formed the Noda Cabinet (2nd reshuffle) (June 4, 2012 to October 1, 2012).
Then he formed the Noda Cabinet (3rd reshuffle) (October 1, 2012 to December 26, 2012). On December 26, 2012, the Shinzo Abe II cabinet was appointed; Shinzō Abe became the new Prime Minister of Japan .
Minister of State
Office | Surname | image | chamber | fraction | Faction (s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
prime minister | Yoshihiko Noda | Shūgiin | DPJ | ( Noda ) | |
Ministers of State who run a ministry | |||||
Minister of Internal Affairs and Communication Minister of State for Affairs of Okinawa and the Northern Territories Minister of State for "Promoting the Sovereignty of the Regions" (chiiki shuken suishin) responsible for "revitalizing the regions" (chiiki kasseika) |
Tatsuo Kawabata | Shūgiin | DPJ | Kawabata | |
Minister of Justice | Hideo Hiraoka | Shūgiin | DPJ | Hiraoka-Kondo | |
Foreign minister | Kōichirō Gemba | Shūgiin | DPJ | Gemba | |
Finance minister | Jun Azumi | Shūgiin | DPJ | Maehara | |
Minister for Education, Culture, Sport, Science and Technology | Masaharu Nakagawa | Shūgiin | DPJ | Hata | |
Minister for Health, Labor and Social Affairs | Yōko Komiyama | Shūgiin | DPJ | Maehara | |
Minister for Agriculture, Forests and Fisheries | Michihiko Kano | Shūgiin | DPJ | Kano | |
Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry responsible for economic damage caused by nuclear power |
Yoshio Hachiro until September 11, 2011 |
Shūgiin | DPJ | Yokomichi | |
Osamu Fujimura provisionally |
Shūgiin | DPJ | Noda | ||
Yukio Edano from September 12, 2011 |
Shūgiin | DPJ | Maehara | ||
Minister of Land, Infrastructure and Transport responsible for maritime affairs |
Takeshi Maeda | Sangiin | DPJ | Hata | |
Environment Minister Minister of State for the Organization of Compensation for Nuclear Power Damage (genshiryoku songai baishō shien kikō) responsible for the "normalization and relapse prevention of nuclear power accidents" (gempatsu jiko no shūsoku oyobi saihatsu bōshi) |
Goshi Hosono | Shūgiin | DPJ | Maehara | |
Defense Minister | Yasuo Ichikawa | Sangiin | DPJ | Ozawa | |
Chief Cabinet Secretary | |||||
Chief Cabinet Secretary | Osamu Fujimura | Shūgiin | DPJ | Noda | |
Minister of State without a ministry | |||||
Chairman of the National Public Safety Commission, Minister of State for Consumer and Food Safety responsible for the kidnapping issue |
Kenji Yamaoka | Shūgiin | DPJ | Ozawa | |
Minister of State for the Financial Sector responsible for postal reform |
Shōzaburō Jimi | Sangiin | NVP | - | |
Minister of State for Economic and Financial Policy, Science & Technology Policy responsible for "National Strategy" (kokka senryaku), "Integrated social security and tax reform" (shakai hoshō, zei ittai kaikaku) |
Motohisa Furukawa | Shūgiin | DPJ | Maehara | |
Minister of State for the “renewal of the administration” (gyōsei sasshin), combating the decline in the birth rate, gender equality responsible for reforming the civil service |
Renhō (Murata) | Sangiin | DPJ | Noda | |
Minister of State for Disaster Management responsible for the reconstruction after the Great East Japan Earthquake |
Tatsuo Hirano | Sangiin | DPJ | Ozawa |
The ministers of state without a ministry are naikaku-fu tokumei tantō daijin ("Minister of State at the Cabinet Office for Special Tasks"). Additional special areas of responsibility in italics.
The following were designated as possible representatives of the Prime Minister under Article 9 of the Cabinet Act:
- Osamu Fujimura,
- Michihiko Kano,
- Tatsuo Kawabata,
- Kenji Yamaoka,
- Takeshi Maeda.
State Secretaries
When the Minister of State took office, the term of office of the Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretaries and the Head of the Cabinet's Legislative Office began . The Prime Minister's Special Advisers and State Secretaries in the ministries were appointed on September 5, 2011.
Office | Surname | chamber | fraction | Faction (s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cabinet Secretariat, Legislative Office | ||||
Deputy Head of the Cabinet Secretariat | Tsuyoshi Saitō | Shūgiin | DPJ | Hiraoka-Kondo |
Hiroyuki Nagahama | Sangiin | DPJ | Noda | |
Makoto Taketoshi | - | - | - | |
Head of the Legislative Office of the Cabinet | Shin'ichirō Kajita | - | - | - |
Special Advisor to the Prime Minister | ||||
Special Advisor for Reconstruction after the Great East Japan Earthquake | Yoshinori Suematsu | Shūgiin | DPJ | Can |
Special advisor for political leadership under the primacy of politics, parliamentary affairs | Yoshio Tezuka | Shūgiin | DPJ | |
Special Advisor on Foreign Policy and National Security | Akihisa Nagashima | Shūgiin | DPJ | Noda |
Special advisor for balancing ministries and authorities on important domestic issues | Hiranao Honda | Shūgiin | DPJ | Kan, Hiraoka-Kondō |
Special advisor for political leadership under the primacy of politics, parliamentary affairs | Shun'ichi Mizuoka | Sangiin | DPJ | |
Vice Minister ( Fukudaijin ) | ||||
Cabinet Office | Katsuyuki Ishida | Shūgiin | DPJ | |
Hitoshi Gotō | Shūgiin | DPJ | ||
Ikkō Nakatsuka | Shūgiin | DPJ | Ozawa, Kawabata | |
Internal affairs and communication | Tōru Kikawada | Shūgiin | DPJ | Ozawa |
Kimiaki Matsuzaki | Shūgiin | DPJ | Hata | |
Judiciary | Makoto Taki | Shūgiin | DPJ | |
Foreign Affairs | Tsuyoshi Yamaguchi | Shūgiin | DPJ | Hata |
Ryūji Yamane | Sangiin | DPJ | Kawabata | |
Finances | Fumihiko Igarashi | Shūgiin | DPJ | Hatoyama |
Yukihisa Fujita | Sangiin | DPJ | ||
Education, culture, sports, science and technology | Tenzō Okumura | Shūgiin | DPJ | Ozawa |
Yūko Mori | Sangiin | DPJ | Ozawa | |
Work, health and social affairs | Yoshio Maki | Shūgiin | DPJ | Hatoyama, Kawabata |
Yasuhiro Tsuji | Sangiin | DPJ | ||
Agriculture, forestry and fishing | Nobutaka Tsutsui | Shūgiin | DPJ | Yokomichi |
Tsukasa Iwamoto | Sangiin | DPJ | Kawabata | |
Economy, trade and industry | Seishu Makino | Shūgiin | DPJ | |
Tadahiro Matsushita | Shūgiin | NVP | - | |
Land, infrastructure and transport | Ken Okuda | Shūgiin | DPJ | Hata |
Jin Matsubara | Shūgiin | DPJ | Ozawa, Hatoyama, Kawabata | |
environment | Katsuhiko Yokomitsu | Shūgiin | DPJ | Yokomichi |
defense | Shu Watanabe | Shūgiin | DPJ | Maehara |
Parliamentary State Secretaries ( Daijinseimukan ) | ||||
Cabinet Office |
Yukihiko Akutsu until September 7, 2011 |
Shūgiin | DPJ | Can |
Kazuko Kōri from September 7, 2011 |
Shūgiin | DPJ | Yokomichi | |
Hiroshi Ōgushi | Shūgiin | DPJ | Noda | |
Yasuhiro Sonoda | Shūgiin | DPJ | Hata | |
Internal affairs and communication | Akio Fukuda | Shūgiin | DPJ | |
Ryō Shuhama | Sangiin | DPJ | Ozawa | |
Takashi Morita | Sangiin | NVP | - | |
Judiciary | Hiroyuki Tani | Sangiin | DPJ | Yokomichi |
Foreign Affairs | Jō Nakano | Shūgiin | DPJ | |
Toshiyuki Kato | Sangiin | DPJ | ||
Kazuyuki Hamada | Sangiin | - | - | |
Finances | Mitsuo Mitani | Shūgiin | DPJ | Noda |
Izumi Yoshida | Shūgiin | DPJ | Hatoyama | |
Education, culture, sports, science and technology | Takashi Kii | Shūgiin | DPJ | |
Mieko Kamimoto | Sangiin | DPJ | Yokomichi | |
Work, health and social affairs | Kazue Fujita | Shūgiin | DPJ | Hiraoka-Kondo |
Yatarō Tsuda | Sangiin | DPJ | ||
Agriculture, forestry and fishing | Hiroko Nakano | Shūgiin | DPJ | Ozawa |
Tetsuo Morimoto | Shūgiin | DPJ | Kawabata | |
Economy, trade and industry | Keirō Kitagami | Shūgiin | DPJ | Noda, Maehara |
Mitsuyoshi Yanagisawa | Sangiin | DPJ | ||
Land, infrastructure and transport | Shōgo Tsugawa | Shūgiin | DPJ | |
Kyōichi Tsushima | Shūgiin | DPJ | Ozawa | |
Kunihiko Muroi | Sangiin | DPJ | Ozawa | |
environment | Satoshi Takayama | Shūgiin | DPJ | Ozawa, Kawabata |
defense | Mitsu Shimojō | Shūgiin | DPJ | Hata |
Hideo Jimpu | Shūgiin | DPJ | Ozawa |
resignation
- Economy Minister Hachiro announced his resignation on September 10, 2011 (effective September 11) because of remarks on the Fukushima nuclear disaster (since March 2011).
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ 野 田 内閣 が 発 足 = 「党内 融和」 で 政 権 立 て 直 し . In: Jiji Tsūshin . September 2, 2011, Retrieved September 2, 2011 (Japanese).
- ↑ ト ッ プ は 藤 村官 房 長官 首相 の 臨時 代理 . (No longer available online.) In: MSN / Sankei News. September 2, 2011, archived from the original on September 4, 2011 ; Retrieved September 4, 2011 (Japanese). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ^ METI Chief Quits After Eight Days. In: The Japan Times . September 11, 2011, accessed September 12, 2011 .
- ^ Japan Trade Minister Hachiro Quits over Nuclear Gaffe. In: BBC News . September 10, 2011, accessed September 12, 2011 .