Hisashi Asō

Japanese politician (1891–1940) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hisashi Asō (麻生 久, Asō Hisashi; 24 May 1891 – 6 September 1940) was a Japanese socialist politician and trade unionist active in the Taishō and early Shōwa periods. He served as chairman of the Social Mass Party (Shakai Taishūtō) and was a key figure in prewar proletarian parties and the labour movement, later advocating collaboration with right-wing renovationist elements and the military.

Preceded byMulti-member district
Succeeded byŌhashi Seitarō
ConstituencyTokyo 5th
Born(1891-05-24)24 May 1891
Quick facts Member of the House of Representatives, Preceded by ...
Hisashi Asō
麻生 久
Asō in 1936
Member of the House of Representatives
In office
20 February 1936  6 September 1940
Preceded byMulti-member district
Succeeded byŌhashi Seitarō
ConstituencyTokyo 5th
Personal details
Born(1891-05-24)24 May 1891
Died6 September 1940(1940-09-06) (aged 49)
Tokyo, Japan
Resting placeTama Cemetery
PartyShakai Taishūtō (1932–1940)
Other political
affiliations
ChildrenYoshikata Asō
Alma materTokyo Imperial University
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Biography

Hisashi Asō was born on 24 May 1891, in Higashi-Iida Village, Kusu District, Ōita Prefecture (present-day Kokonoe, Ōita).[1] He attended the old-system Oita Middle School (now Oita Prefectural Oita Uenogaoka High School), graduated from the Third Higher School in 1913,[2] and entered the French Law Department of Tokyo Imperial University that year, graduating in 1917. During his student days, he immersed himself in Russian literature, particularly Tolstoy and Turgenev, which sparked his interest in the Russian Revolution. He was also known for his flamboyant relationships with women.

After graduation, Asō joined the Tokyo Nichinichi Shimbun (now Mainichi Shimbun) as a journalist in 1917[3] but soon left. In 1918, he serialized "From Peter to Lenin" in the paper, openly supporting the Russian Revolution. That same year, with Sakuzō Yoshino and others, he helped found the Renmeikai (Dawn Society), an enlightenment organization for Taishō democracy, involving prominent intellectuals such as Inazō Nitobe, Ikuo Ōyama, Shinzo Koizumi, and Akiko Yosano.[4][5] He participated in the Thursday Society and, as a senior, in the Shinjinkai at Tokyo Imperial University.

In 1919, Asō joined the Yūaikai (Friendly Society) and, with contemporary Kotora Tanahashi, pushed the organization, originally inclined toward labour-management harmony, toward more radical and militant positions. On 2 December 1919, he and 14 other union leaders were arrested during a speech event organized by the Hitachi branch, leading to its collapse.[6] In 1920, he founded the All Japan Miners' Federation and led disputes at Ashio Copper Mine, Hitachi Copper Mine, Yubari Coal Mine, and others, resulting in repeated imprisonments. His eldest son, Yoshikata, was born in 1923; that year he published Swimming in the Muddy Stream.

In 1925, Asō became political section chief of the Japan General Federation of Labour (successor to Yūaikai). He participated in proletarian party movements and became a central executive committee member of the Labour-Farmer Party upon its formation in 1926. After internal left-right splits dissolved the party, he co-founded the Japan Labour-Farmer Party in December 1926 with Toshio Miwa, Shoichi Miyake, Yamana Yoshitsuru, and others, serving in leadership roles (secretary-general or chairman) in subsequent centrist proletarian parties: Japan Mass Party, National Mass Party, and National Labour-Farmer Mass Party.[7]

In 1932, the National Labour-Farmer Mass Party merged with the Social People's Party to form the Social Mass Party, where Asō became secretary-general (chairman: Isoo Abe). From this period, he sought to expand socialist influence by aligning with the military's "renovationist" elements. Although condemning the Manchurian Incident as capitalistic and imperialist, he claimed it pushed the army in an anti-capitalist direction and became involved in the 1931 March incident.[8][9] He praised the 1934 Army pamphlet Essence of National Defense and Proposals for its Reinforcement as expressing socialist tendencies in the military and became one of its strongest advocates alongside Kanichirō Kamei.[10] With Kamei, he advanced the party's shift toward totalitarianism.

Asō was elected to the House of Representatives for Tokyo's 5th district in the 1936 general election and reelected in 1937.[11] With the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, he supported the government on condition of localized resolution and non-escalation, approving military budgets. In 1938, he and Kamei worked with Akiyama Teisuke to draft plans for a new reformist, totalitarian party led by themselves and Fumimaro Konoe.[12] In 1939, he attempted a merger with Tōhōkai under Seigō Nakano to explore right-wing ties, though it failed at the last minute despite pushing against Abe's reservations.

In 1940, amid the controversy over Saitō Takao's anti-military speech, Asō supported Saitō's expulsion from the House. He purged right-wing party members opposing it, including Abe Isoo, Bunji Suzuki, Tetsu Katayama, Suehiro Nishio, Chōzaburō Mizutani, and Jiichirō Matsumoto, and succeeded Abe as party president. Cooperating actively with Konoe's New Order movement, he dissolved the Social Mass Party on 6 July 1940, ahead of others, anticipating a leading role in the Imperial Rule Assistance Association. He joined the preparatory committee for the new system under the Second Konoe Cabinet. However, he died of heart paralysis (heart attack) on 6 September 1940, at age 49.[1][13][4] He is buried at Tama Cemetery.

Evaluation

Asō believed Japan's revolution could only succeed through collaboration among military forces, proletarian forces, the Emperor, and popular forces. However, as military dictatorship intensified, he supported the military, the Sino-Japanese War, and the Imperial Rule Assistance Association while suppressing opposition, leading some to view his stance as war-affirming.

Family

  • Eldest son: Yoshikata Asō (secretary to Inejiro Asanuma, former House of Representatives member)
  • Grandson (Yoshikata's son): Teruhisa Asō (Shinjuku Ward assembly member)

Selected works

  • A Labour Activist's Soliloquy (Kinsei Shakai Shisō Sōsho), Ōtōkaku, 1921
  • The Crowd Striving to Live, Shinkōsha, 1923
  • Swimming in the Muddy Stream, Shinkōsha, 1923 (reissued by Kaizōsha, 1930)
  • Dawn, Shinkōsha, 1924
  • Theory and Practice of Proletarian Parties, Kagaku Shisō Fukyūkai, 1924
  • Those Crossing Life, Shinkōsha, 1925
  • What Is a Proletarian Party? The Newly Born Labour-Farmer Party, Shichōsha, 1926
  • Talks on Socialism, Seibundō Jūsen Bunko, 1930
  • Life Exists in Struggle, Ōtōkaku, 1930
  • Father, Do Not Grieve: A Full-Length Novel, Senshinsha, 1930
  • The Approaching Crisis of World War: Positively Recognize the Current Situation (National Policy Studies No. 3), Kokusaku Kenkyūsha, 1938
  • The Meaning of Modern War, Shakai Taishūtō Shuppanbu, 1938
  • Selected Works of Hisashi Asō Vol. 2 (Dawn), Kaikō Shoten, 1947
Translation
  • James Welsh, Heroes from the Bottom: The Story of Coal Miner Robert Sinclair, co-translated with Yasuo Watanabe, Shinkōsha, 1924

Biographies

  • Biography of Hisashi Asō, compiled by Hisashi Asō Biography Publication Committee, 1958
  • Shoichi Miyake, History of Japanese Social Movements in a Turbulent Period: The Trajectories of Toyohiko Kagawa, Hisashi Asō, and Inejiro Asanuma, Gendai Hyōronsha, 1973

References

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