Shikōkai
Political party in Japan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shikōkai (Japanese: 志公会) is a faction led by Tarō Asō[2] within the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).[3] Before the dissolution of other factions, it was the third-largest faction within the LDP.[4] It was established in 2017.[5]
Shikōkai 志公会 | |
|---|---|
| Leader | Tarō Asō |
| Founder | Tarō Asō |
| Founded | 3 July 2017 |
| Preceded by | Banchō Seisaku Kenkyūjo |
| Ideology | Conservatism Big tent |
| Type | Liberal Democratic Party faction |
| Councillors | 11 / 101 [1] |
| Representatives | 49 / 316 [1] |
History
It was formed by joining the "Ikōkai (former Aso faction)" led by Tarō Asō and the "Bancho Seisaku Kenkyūjo (Santō faction) led by Akiko Santō in 2017.[6][7]
After the 2019 House of Councillors election, Santo, a member of the Aso faction, became President of the House of Councillors.[8]
2020 LDP Presidential election
In the 2020 LDP presidential election, Shikōkai endorsed Yoshihide Suga.[9] As a result of election, Suga was elected to the President of the Liberal Democratic Party and became the Prime Minister.
Bar visit Scandal
Some media reported that Jun Matsumoto, former chair of National Public Safety Commission, a member of the Shikōkai, and Aso’s ally, visited eateries including bars in the capital's upscale Ginza district separately at night in defiance of the national government's request for people to refrain from nonessential and nonurgent outings after 8 p.m. amid the coronavirus state of emergency.[10] Following the scandal, Matsumoto left the LDP. Matsumoto then ran as an independent in the 2021 general election, but was defeated by CDP’s Go Shinohara in Kanagawa 1st.[11]
2021 LDP presidential election
In the 2021 LDP presidential election, Taro Kono, a member of the Aso faction, announced his candidacy.[12] Meanwhile, Akira Amari and Shun'ichi Suzuki, Asō's brother-in-law, supported Fumio Kishida.[13] Asō feared that the factions would split. As an Shikōkai, a faction endorsed both Kono and Kishida, and left the vote up to the individual members of the Diet to decide.[14] As a result of the election, Kishida was elected to the President of the Liberal Democratic Party.
Kishida appointed Amari as LDP secretary general to thank Asō faction member such as Amari for his support.[15] However, due to the fact that he was dug up for past political scandals, Amari lost his Kamagawa 13th seat in the 2021 general election shortly afterwards, losing to CDP’s Hideshi Futori. Amari won a seat in the Southern Kanto PR block and maintained his position as a member of the House of Representatives, but was forced to resign as secretary general.[16]
Post presidential election split
In February 2022, four members of the House of Representatives, former Minister of Internal Affairs and Communications Tsutomu Sato, Nobuhide Minorikawa, Toshiko Abe, and Hideki Niwa, announced their withdrawal from the Aso faction. Sato was close to former PM Suga and supported Kono in the 2021 LDP presidential election. As a result, Asō faction retreated from a second faction to a third faction within the party.[17][18] It is also reported that the reason behind Sato's departure was the return of Matsumoto Jun, who left the LDP due to the scandal.[19]
to the Only faction in the party
In January 2024, as LDP faction's political funds scandal was discovered and other factions decided to dissolve, Asō faction members discussed their future actions. Many of its members insisted on survival and left the response to leader Asō. However, former Defense Minister Takeshi Iwaya, who opposed the faction's survival, withdrew from the faction.[20][21] Eventually, Shikōkai survived and became the only faction within the LDP.[22]
2024 LDP presidential election
As in the previous election, Taro Kono, a member of the Shikōkai, announced his candidacy in the 2024 LDP presidential election. Shikōkai member supported Kono, Yōko Kamikawa, or other candidates and Shikōkai did not endorsed any particular candidate as a faction.
After 2026 general election
After the 2026 general election, many Diet members participated in the Shikōkai and became a force with 60 members. On the other hand, when former Justice Minister Eisuke Mori became Speaker of the House of Representatives, he left the Shikōkai according to custom.[1][23]
Shikōkai faction heads
| No. | Image | Faction head | Years |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tarō Asō | 2017– | |
Membership
Exceutives
| Leader | Tarō Asō |
|---|---|
| Acting leader | Akinori Eto |
| Kazunori Tanaka | |
| Deputy leader | Shun'ichi Suzuki |
| Shunichi Yamaguchi | |
| Secretary General |
Vacant |
| Secretary Director |
Shinji Inoue |
House of Representatives
| Name | Birth date and Age | Constituency | Current positions or former positions | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hiroki Abe | December 15, 1961 | Kyushu PR | None | |
| Jiro Akama | March 27, 1968 | Kanagawa 14th | Chair of the National Public Safety Commission (2025–present) Previous offices held
|
|
| Tarō Asō | September 20, 1940 | Fukuoka 8th | Vice President of the Liberal Democratic Party (2021-2024; 2025–present) Previous offices held
|
|
| Tatsunori Ibayashi | July 18, 1976 | Shizuoka 2nd | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Yosei Ide | November 21, 1977 | Nagano 3rd | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Soichiro Imaeda | February 18, 1984 | Aichi 14th | State Minister for Digital Transformation (2025-present) State Minister of Cabinet Office (2025-present) Previous offices held
|
|
| Shinji Inoue | October 7, 1969 | Tokyo 25th | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Takahiro Inoue | April 2, 1962 | Fukuoka 1st | Special Advisor to the Prime Minister of Japan (2025-present) Previous offices held
|
|
| Shintaro Ito | May 6, 1953 | Tohoku PR | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Arfiya Eri | October 16, 1988 | Chiba 5th | Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs (2024-present) |
|
| Akinori Eto | October 12, 1955 | Tohoku PR | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Yui Kanazawa | October 23, 1990 | Kanagawa 20th | None | |
| Masami Kawano | June 30, 1961 | Kyushu PR | None | |
| Keiro Kitagami | February 1, 1967 | Kyoto 4th | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Masahiro Kōmura | November 14, 1970 | Yamaguchi 1st | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Taro Kono | January 10, 1963 | Kanagawa 15th | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Shozo Kudō | December 8, 1964 | Aichi 4th | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Karen Makishima | November 1, 1976 | Kanagawa 17th | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Hideki Matsushita | September 6, 1990 | Hokkaido 9th | None | |
| Natsuko Maruo | February 25, 1982 | Kanagawa 1st | None | |
| Asato Mihara | December 8, 1977 | Kyushu PR (Fukuoka 9th) |
None | |
| Kiyoko Morihara | July 23, 1980 | Tokyo PR | None | |
| Jun Mukōyama | November 19, 1983 | Hokkaido 8th | Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications (2025-present) |
|
| Nagisa Muraki | February 14, 2000 | Hokkaido PR | None | |
| Yoji Muto | October 18, 1955 | Gifu 3rd | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Keiko Nagaoka | December 8, 1953 | Northern Kanto PR (Ibaraki 7th) |
None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Yasumasa Nagasaka | April 10, 1957 | Aichi 9th | State Minister of Health, Labour and Welfare (2025-present) Previous offices held
|
|
| Takamoto Nakagawa | February 25, 1967 | Tōkai PR | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Hiroyuki Nakamura | February 23, 1961 | Hokkaido 4th | State Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (2025-present) Previous offices held
|
|
| Kenji Nakanishi | January 4, 1964 | Kanagawa 3rd | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Norihiro Nakayama | September 16, 1968 | Shikoku PR | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Hirobumi Niki | May 23, 1966 | Tokushima 1st | State Minister of Health, Labour and Welfare (2024-present) |
|
| Yasuhiro Okamoto | March 13, 1982 | Aichi 5th | None | |
| Hiroaki Saito | December 8, 1976 | Niigata 3rd | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Takakazu Seto | August 2, 1965 | Shikoku PR (Kagawa 2nd) |
State Minister of Cabinet Office (2024-present) State Minister for Reconstruction (2025-present) Previous offices held
|
|
| Keisuke Suzuki | February 9, 1977 | Kanagawa 7th | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Shun'ichi Suzuki | April 13, 1953 | Iwate 2nd | Secretary-General of the Liberal Democratic Party (2025–present) Previous offices held
|
|
| Yasufumi Tanahashi | February 11, 1963 | Gifu 2nd | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Kazunori Tanaka | January 21, 1949 | Kanagawa 10th | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Shin Tsuchida | October 30, 1990 | Tokyo 13th | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Hideki Tsuji | May 2, 1975 | Tōkai PR (Aichi 2nd) |
None | |
| Kenji Yamada | April 20, 1966 | Hyōgo 7th | State Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry (2025-present) State Minister of Cabinet Office (2025-present) Previous offices held
|
|
| Motoyasu Yamada | November 3, 1982 | Hyōgo 11th | None | |
| Daishiro Yamagiwa | September 12, 1968 | Kanagawa 18th | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Shunichi Yamaguchi | February 28, 1950 | Tokushima 2nd | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Tsuyoshi Yamaguchi | October 3, 1954 | Hyōgo 12th | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Sakon Yamamoto | July 9, 1982 | Tōkai PR | None | |
| Shizuo Yamashita | July 6, 1975 | Aichi 16th | None | |
| Hiromasa Yonai | May 14, 1987 | Tohoku PR (Iwate 1st) |
None |
House of Councillors
| Name | Birth date and Age | Constituency | Current positions or former positions | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haruko Arimura | September 21, 1970 | National PR | Chair of the LDP General Council (2025-present) Previous offices held
|
|
| Keiichiro Asao | February 11, 1964 | Kanagawa | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Masahito Fujikawa | July 8, 1960 | Aichi | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Toshimitsu Funahashi | November 20, 1960 | Hokkaido | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Eriko Imai | September 22, 1983 | National PR | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Kuniko Inoguchi | May 3, 1952 | Chiba | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Masayuki Kamiya | January 6, 1979 | National PR | Parliamentary Secretary for Health, Labour and Welfare (2025-present) |
|
| Yūsuke Nakanishi | July 12, 1979 | Tokushima-Kōchi | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Satoshi Ōie | July 17, 1967 | Fukuoka | None
Previous offices held
|
|
| Katsunori Takahashi | December 7, 1957 | Tochigi | State Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications (2025-present) Previous offices held
|
|
| Hiroshi Yamada | January 8, 1958 | National PR | None
Previous offices held
|