Tomomi Narita
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tomomi Narita | |
|---|---|
成田 知巳 | |
Narita in 1965 | |
| Chairman of the Japan Socialist Party | |
| In office 30 November 1968 – 13 December 1977 | |
| Preceded by | Seiichi Katsumata |
| Succeeded by | Ichio Asukata |
| Member of the House of Representatives | |
| In office 26 April 1947 – 9 March 1979 | |
| Preceded by | Constituency established |
| Succeeded by | Tan Maekawa |
| Constituency | Kagawa 1st |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 15 September 1912 |
| Died | 9 March 1979 (aged 66) Meguro, Tokyo, Japan |
| Party | Socialist |
| Other political affiliations | LSP (1951–1955) |
| Alma mater | Tokyo Imperial University |
Tomomi Narita (成田 知巳, Narita Tomomi; 15 September 1912 – 9 March 1979) was a Japanese politician who served as the chairman for the Japan Socialist Party from 1968 to 1977. He also served in a few other capacities, such as Chief of the Policy Deliberation Group and Secretary General.
Narita was born in Takamatsu, Kagawa, as the son of Takaji Narita, who worked for Takamatsu city council members by being a fertiliser dealer. He attended the school which today is known as Takamatsu High School. and from there went on to the school which today is known as Kanazawa University, and the finally to Tokyo Imperial University. While in Takamatsu, he served as a baseball club manager, where he was one academic grade below Osamu Mihara. After graduating, he began working for the company that today is known as Nippon Coke and Engineering. In 1941, he switched over to Mitsui Chemicals, and then in 1943 he was promoted to the role of Chief for the company's documentation section. When he was attending a fourth high school, he was in the same class as Tokuji Kameda, who would later become a House of Councillors member for the Socialist Party.[1]
Narita ran as an independent in the 1946 general election but did not win his seat. In the following 1947 general election, he ran again, but this time as a Socialist Party candidate, and won his seat. Thereafter, he would be elected 12 times in a row. Within the Socialist Party itself, he became a member of the Suzuki faction. Following the Socialist Party's reunification in 1955 after a brief era of division between the Rightists and Leftists, Narita became the Chief of the JSP's General Affairs Bureau, and in 1960, he became the Chief of the Policy Deliberation Group under party Chairman Inejiro Asanuma.
As a reformist
When the Secretary General Saburo Eda began to advance structural reform theories, Narita approved of it and as a result, Eda and Narita found themselves in the limelight of the mass media.[2] In 1962, when Eda resigned from his position as Secretary General, it was Narita who succeeded him in this position.[3]
However, in contrast to Eda, whose positions had gradually moved closer to the right wing of the party, Narita's views shifted leftwards, and he began to advocate for the "Make War on Structural Reform" movement.[4] On the very first day of 1964, Narita listed the following three weaknesses of the Socialist Party in an article for the Society News newspaper:
- Lack of regular organisational activities
- An image that is too political or governmental
- Over-reliance on labour unions
However, he was unable to prescribe possible resolutions for these issues.
