Shizuka Kamei

Japanese politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Shizuka Kamei (亀井 静香, Kamei Shizuka; born 1 November 1936) is a retired Japanese politician served in the House of Representatives from 1979 to 2017. He was a faction leader in the Liberal Democratic Party, but left in opposition to Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi in 2005 and founded the People's New Party.

Preceded byKaoru Yosano
Succeeded byShōzaburō Jimi
Prime MinisterRyutaro Hashimoto
Quick facts Minister of State for Financial Services, Prime Minister ...
Shizuka Kamei
亀井 静香
Kamei in 2010
Minister of State for Financial Services
In office
16 September 2009  11 June 2010
Prime MinisterYukio Hatoyama
Naoto Kan
Preceded byKaoru Yosano
Succeeded byShōzaburō Jimi
Minister of Construction
In office
7 November 1996  11 September 1997
Prime MinisterRyutaro Hashimoto
Preceded byEiichi Nakao
Succeeded byTsutomu Kawara
Minister of Transport
In office
30 June 1994  8 August 1995
Prime MinisterTomiichi Murayama
Preceded byNobuaki Futami
Succeeded byTakeo Hiranuma
Member of the House of Representatives
In office
8 October 1979  28 September 2017
Preceded byYoshito Fukuoka
Succeeded byKoji Satō
ConstituencyHiroshima 3rd (1979–1996)
Hiroshima 6th (1996–2017)
Personal details
Born (1936-11-01) 1 November 1936 (age 89)
PartyIndependent
Other political
affiliations
LDP (1979–2005)
PNP (2005–2012)
TCJ (2012)
TPJ (2012)
Green Wind (2012–2013)
Children5
RelativesIkuo Kamei (brother)
Alma materUniversity of Tokyo
WebsiteOfficial website
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He is a former chairman of the Parliamentary League for the Abolition of the Death Penalty.[1][2][3]

Early life

He was born in the city of Shōbara in Hiroshima Prefecture into a poor family. He studied at the department of economics at University of Tokyo and worked his way through school through various jobs, including singing at a cabaret.

Upon graduation in 1960, he entered Sumitomo Seika, and joined the National Police Agency in 1962. In 1972, he took charge of a number of high-profile cases, including the Red Army Asama-Sanso incident, the Narita Airport incident, and the Tel Aviv highjacking. Kamei is one of the few major politicians to oppose the death penalty, and wrote a book, Shikei Haishi ron, asserting his opposition.

Political career

In 1977, he left the agency and received 3.5 million yen in severance pay, which he used to run for the Diet in Hiroshima. He was elected in 1979 as a member of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).

In 1989, he formed the Freedom Reform Alliance, criticizing the LDP's system of factions and strongly supported Shintarō Ishihara. He became Minister of Transport in 1994 and Minister of Construction in 1996. In 1998, he left the Mitsuzuka faction and formed the "Nakayama-Kamei group" with Minister of Foreign Affairs Taro Nakayama.

In 1999, he headed up the LDP's Policy Research Council and founded the Kamei faction. In 2003, he unsuccessfully ran for the position of Prime Minister against the incumbent, Junichiro Koizumi.

He opposed Koizumi's postal privatization plan and left the LDP in 2005, forming the Kokumin Shinto (People's New Party) with four other Diet members. Despite facing the popular businessman Takafumi Horie in the 2005 election, he won reelection for the tenth time.

On 16 September 2009, Kamei became the banking and postal services minister in the newly formed Hatoyama cabinet. Throughout the week, he voiced his commitment to providing economic stability for small companies, who he claimed "had lost vitality".[4] He plans to provide a moratorium of up to three years on loan repayments and attempts to put a brake on what he perceives as excesses by financial and lending institutions.[5]

Kamei decided not to run in the 2017 Japanese general election and therefore lost his seat in the House of Representatives.[6]

Cultural references

He is sometimes humorously referred to as Shizuka-chan (where "chan" is a title usually reserved for young girls) after a female character in the manga Doraemon who shares his personal name.

The character "Takeo Tsuruta" in the manga Akumetsu is based on him.

Scandal

In August 2003, Kamei acknowledged receiving political donations from the leader of a group of loan sharks affiliated to the Yamaguchi-gumi, the largest known yakuza syndicate in Japan.[7] The donor was Susumu Kajiyama.[8]

Personal life

Kamei is a six-level blackbelt in Aikido and enjoys golf and oil painting.

Election history

More information Election, Age ...
Election Age District Political party Number of votes election results
1979 Japanese general election 42 Hiroshima 3rd district LDP 59,350 winning
1980 Japanese general election 43 Hiroshima 3rd district LDP 86,562 winning
1983 Japanese general election 47 Hiroshima 3rd district LDP 73,862 winning
1986 Japanese general election 49 Hiroshima 3rd district LDP 116,514 winning
1990 Japanese general election 53 Hiroshima 3rd district LDP 97,433 winning
1993 Japanese general election 56 Hiroshima 3rd district LDP 91,064 winning
1996 Japanese general election 59 Hiroshima 6th district LDP 122,071 winning
2000 Japanese general election 63 Hiroshima 6th district LDP 138,790 winning
2003 Japanese general election 67 Hiroshima 6th district LDP 117,659 winning
2005 Japanese general election 68 Hiroshima 6th district PNP 110,979 winning
2009 Japanese general election 72 Hiroshima 6th district PNP 137,287 winning
2012 Japanese general election 76 Hiroshima 6th district TPJ 91,078[9] winning
2014 Japanese general election 78 Hiroshima 6th district Independent 89,756[10] winning
[11][12][13]
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See also

References

Further reading

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