Cabinet Shinzō Abe I
Cabinet Shinzō Abe I | |
---|---|
90th Japanese cabinet dai-90-dai naikaku |
|
Prime Minister Naikaku Sōri-Daijin |
Shinzo Abe |
Legislative period | 165-167. Kokkai (44th Shūgiin , 20th – 21st Sangiin ) |
Appointed by | Emperor Akihito |
education | September 26, 2006 |
The End | August 27, 2007 |
Duration | 0 years and 335 days |
predecessor | Koizumi III cabinet (reshuffle) |
successor | Shinzō Abe I cabinet (remodeling) |
composition | |
Party (s) | LDP - Kōmeitō coalition government ji-kō renritsu seiken |
minister | 18 (3 resignations, 1 suicide) |
State Secretaries | 5 Special Advisers to the Prime Minister 3 Parliamentary Vice-Heads of the Cabinet Secretariat 23 "Vice Ministers" 27 "Parliamentary Secretaries" |
representation | |
Shūgiin | 339/480 (at Premier choice 26.9.2006) |
Sangiin | 136/242 (at the premier election) |
Opposition leader | Ichirō Ozawa (Shūgiin, DPJ ) |
The first Abe cabinet ( Japanese 第 1 次 安 倍 内閣 , daiichiji Abe naikaku ) ruled Japan under the leadership of Prime Minister Shinzō Abe from September 26, 2006 until a cabinet reshuffle on August 27, 2007.
The previous Prime Minister Jun'ichirō Koizumi ( Mori faction , from October 2006: Machimura faction) reached his term limit as chairman of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in September 2006 . The decision titled as "Post-Koizumi" about his successor in the election of the LDP chairman on September 20, 2006 won Shinzō Abe (Mori faction) against Tarō Asō ( Kōno faction , later: Asō faction) and Sadakazu Tanigaki ( Tanigaki faction ). On 26 September 2007 Abe was in the Parliament elected prime minister and presented his cabinet before the same day. The defeated Foreign Minister Asō retained his position, the previous Finance Minister Tanigaki was replaced.
The coalition cabinet of LDP and Kōmeitō included 15 ministers of state from the Shūgiin , the lower house, two members of the Sangiin , the upper house, and a non-member minister, including the prime minister. Two ministers of state (Abe, Asō) had already belonged to the outgoing cabinet . Fumio Kyūma, previously chairman of the executive council (sōmukai) of the LDP, moved to the cabinet, while the previous agriculture minister Shōichi Nakagawa was appointed by Abe as chairman of the political research council to the party leadership. Abe's campaign manager for the election of the LDP chairman, Akira Amari, received the Ministry of Economic Affairs. For the Kōmeitō, the previous General Secretary Fuyushiba replaced Kazuo Kitagawa as minister.
After several ministerial resignations, a pension and several donation scandals, Abe's coalition lost the Sangiin election in 2007 . A few weeks later, on August 27, 2007, he reshuffled the cabinet .
Minister of State
Office | Surname | image | chamber | fraction | Faction |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
prime minister | Shinzo Abe | Shūgiin | LDP | ( Machimura ) | |
Minister of Internal Affairs and Communication Minister of State for Regional Reform in charge of post-privatization |
Yoshihide Suga | Shūgiin | LDP | Koga | |
Minister of Justice | Jin'en Nagase | Shūgiin | LDP | Machimura | |
Foreign minister | Tarō Asō | Shūgiin | LDP | Asō | |
Finance minister | Kōji Omi | Shūgiin | LDP | Machimura | |
Minister for Education, Culture, Sport, Science and Technology | Bunmei Ibuki | Shūgiin | LDP | Ibuki | |
Minister for Health, Labor and Social Affairs | Hakuo Yanagisawa | Shūgiin | LDP | Koga | |
Minister for Agriculture, Forests and Fisheries |
Toshikatsu Matsuoka until May 28, 2007 |
Shūgiin | LDP | Ibuki | |
Masatoshi Wakabayashi acting as acting |
Sangiin | LDP | Machimura | ||
Norihiko Akagi June 1st to August 1st 2007 |
Shūgiin | LDP | Kōmura | ||
Masatoshi Wakabayashi | Sangiin | LDP | Machimura | ||
Minister for Economy, Trade and Industry | Akira Amari | Shūgiin | LDP | Yamasaki | |
Minister of Land, Infrastructure and Transport zust. for tourism, maritime affairs |
Tetsuzō Fuyushiba | Shūgiin | Kōmeitō | - | |
Environment Minister zust. for global environmental issues |
Masatoshi Wakabayashi | Shūgiin | LDP | Machimura | |
Head of Defense from January 9, 2007: Minister of Defense |
Fumio Kyūma until July 4, 2007 |
Shūgiin | LDP | Tsushima | |
Yuriko Koike from July 4th 2007 |
Shūgiin | LDP | Machimura | ||
Chief Secretary of the Cabinet zust. for the kidnapping issue |
Yasuhisa Shiozaki | Shūgiin | LDP | Koga | |
Chairman of the National Public Security Commission, Minister of State for Civil Protection |
Kensei Mizote | Sangiin | LDP | Koga | |
Secretary of State for Okinawa and Northern Territories Affairs , Science and Technology Policy, Innovation, Decline in Births and Gender Equality, Food Safety |
Sanae Takaichi | Shūgiin | LDP | Machimura | |
Minister of State for the Financial Sector for the government program Challenge Again |
Yūji Yamamoto | Shūgiin | LDP | Kōmura | |
Minister of State for Economic and Tax Policy | Hiroko Ōta | - | - | - | |
Minister of State for Deregulation zust. for regional reform, reform of the civil service, rural regeneration, organization of prefectures and regions |
Gen'ichirō Sata until December 28, 2006 |
Shūgiin | LDP | Tsushima | |
Yoshimi Watanabe from December 28, 2006 |
Shūgiin | LDP | - |
Note: The Prime Minister does not officially belong to any political group during his term of office.
Resignations, suicide
- State Minister Sata resigned because of a donation scandal.
- Agriculture Minister Matsuoka committed as part of a fundraising scandal suicide .
- Defense Minister Kyūma resigned over controversial remarks about the atomic bombs being dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki .
- Agriculture Minister Akagi resigned in the wake of a donation scandal after the 2007 Sangiin election was lost .
swell
Individual evidence
- ↑ Shūgiin: Minutes of Sessions 165. Kokkai, No. 1 September 26, appointment of a prime minister
- ↑ Abe Made Prime Minister. Leader Names Cabinet of Close Allies. In: The Japan Times . September 27, 2006, accessed December 6, 2009 .
- ^ Second Japanese Minister Resigns. In: BBC News. December 27, 2006, accessed March 1, 2008 .
- ↑ Japanese Minister Kills Himself. In: BBC News. May 28, 2007, accessed March 1, 2008 .
- ↑ Japan Minister Quits Over Gaffe. In: BBC News. July 3, 2007, accessed March 1, 2008 .
- ↑ Scandal hit Japan Minister Quits. In: BBC News. August 1, 2007, accessed March 1, 2008 .