Eiichi Nishimura (socialist politician)
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Eiichi Nishimura | |
|---|---|
西村 栄一 | |
Nishimura in 1962 | |
| Chairman of the Democratic Socialist Party | |
| In office June 1967 – 27 April 1971 | |
| Preceded by | Suehiro Nishio |
| Succeeded by | Kasuga Ikkō |
| Member of the House of Representatives | |
| In office 11 April 1946 – 27 April 1971 | |
| Preceded by | Constituency established |
| Succeeded by | Sadao Wada |
| Constituency | Osaka 2nd (1946–1947) Osaka 5th (1947–1971) |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 8 March 1904 |
| Died | 27 April 1971 (aged 67) Minato, Tokyo, Japan |
| Party | Democratic Socialist |
| Other political affiliations | SDP (before 1932) Shakai Taishūtō (1932–1940) JSP (1946–1951; 1955–1960) RSP (1951–1955) |
| Children | Shingo Nishimura |
Eiichi Nishimura (Japanese: 西村 栄一, Nishimura Eiichi; 8 March 1904 – 27 April 1971) was a Japanese politician who served as the second chairman of the Democratic Socialist Party from 1967 to his death in 1971.
Nishimura was born in a farmhouse in Kamata village (today a part of Gose, Nara) to a lumber-dealing father. After his father went bankrupt in 1910, Nishimura was entrusted to family relatives in Tokyo and went by himself to live with them.[1] He studied at a French high school in Shanghai. While at Shanghai, Nishimura has said that he considered being baptised, but that he decided against it because he was unable to keep the Ten Commandments.[2]
Nishimura was hard-working and worked a number of different jobs throughout his youth, such as being a shopkeeper,[3] a hardware dealer for nails,[4] and, after returning to his native Osaka (which was right next to his home village), he became an office assistant at an insurance company. Eventually, after reaching the age of 31, he was made the manager of the company's Osaka branch. In 1931, he was made a member of the central committee for the National Labor and Agriculture Mass Party.[5]