Japan BETWEEN THE WARS, 1920-36
Hirohito, the Emperor Showa, 124th Japanese
sovereign, and Empress Nagako in full ceremonial dress, at their
1926 enthronement
Courtesy Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress
Two-Party System
The two-party political system that had been developing
in
Japan since the turn of the century finally came of age
after World
War I. This period has sometimes been called that of
"Taish
Democracy," after the reign title of the emperor. In 1918
Hara
Takashi (1856-1921), a protégé of Saionji and a major
influence in
the prewar Seiyokai cabinets, had become the first
commoner to
serve as prime minister. He took advantage of
long-standing
relationships he had throughout the government, won the
support of
the surviving genro and the House of Peers, and
brought into
his cabinet as army minister Tanaka Giichi (1864-1929),
who had a
greater appreciation of favorable civil-military relations
than his
predecessors. Nevertheless, major problems confronted
Hara:
inflation, the need to adjust the Japanese economy to
postwar
circumstances, the influx of foreign ideas, and an
emerging labor
movement. Prewar solutions were applied by the cabinet to
these
postwar problems, and little was done to reform the
government.
Hara worked to ensure a Seiyokai majority through
time-tested
methods, such as new election laws and electoral
redistricting, and
embarked on major government-funded public works programs.
The public grew disillusioned with the growing national
debt
and the new election laws, which retained the old minimum
tax
qualifications for voters. Calls were raised for universal
suffrage
and the dismantling of the old political party network.
Students,
university professors, and journalists, bolstered by labor
unions
and inspired by a variety of democratic, socialist,
communist,
anarchist, and other Western schools of thought, mounted
large but
orderly public demonstrations in favor of universal male
suffrage
in 1919 and 1920. New elections brought still another
Seiyokai
majority, but barely so. In the political milieu of the
day, there
was a proliferation of new parties, including socialist
and
communist parties.
In the midst of this political ferment, Hara was
assassinated
by a disenchanted railroad worker in 1921
(see Diplomacy
, this
ch.). Hara was followed by a succession of nonparty prime
ministers
and coalition cabinets. Fear of a broader electorate,
left-wing
power, and the growing social change engendered by the
influx of
Western popular culture together led to the passage of the
Peace
Preservation Law (1925), which forbade any change in the
political
structure or the abolition of private property.
Unstable coalitions and divisiveness in the Diet led
the
Kenseikai (Constitutional Government Association) and the
Seiy
Honto (True Seiyokai) to merge as the Rikken Minseito
(Constitutional Democratic Party) in 1927. The Rikken
Minseito
platform was committed to the parliamentary system,
democratic
politics, and world peace. Thereafter, until 1932, the
Seiyokai and
the Rikken Minseito alternated in power.
Despite the political realignments and hope for more
orderly
government, domestic economic crises plagued whichever
party held
power. Fiscal austerity programs and appeals for public
support of
such conservative government policies as the Peace
Preservation
Law--including reminders of the moral obligation to make
sacrifices
for the emperor and the state--were attempted as
solutions.
Although the world depression of the late 1920s and early
1930s had
minimal effects on Japan--indeed, Japanese exports grew
substantially during this period--there was a sense of
rising
discontent that was heightened with the assassination of
Rikken
Minseito prime minister Hamaguchi Osachi (1870-1931) in
1931.
The events flowing from the Meiji Restoration in 1868
had seen
not only the fulfillment of many domestic and foreign
economic and
political objectives--without Japan's first suffering the
colonial
fate of other Asian nations--but also a new intellectual
ferment,
in a time when there was interest worldwide in socialism
and an
urban proletariat was developing. Universal male suffrage,
social
welfare, workers' rights, and nonviolent protest were
ideals of the
early leftist movement. Government suppression of leftist
activities, however, led to more radical leftist action
and even
more suppression, resulting in the dissolution of the
Japan
Socialist Party (Nihon Shakaito), only a year after its
1906
founding, and in the general failure of the socialist
movement.
The victory of the Bolsheviks in Russia in 1917 and
their hopes
for a world revolution led to the establishment of the
Comintern (a
contraction of Communist International, the organization
founded in
Moscow in 1919 to coordinate the world communist
movement). The
Comintern realized the importance of Japan in achieving
successful
revolution in East Asia and actively worked to form the
Japan
Communist Party (Nihon Kyosanto), which was founded in
July 1922.
The announced goals of the Japan Communist Party in 1923
were an
end to feudalism, abolition of the monarchy, recognition
of the
Soviet Union, and withdrawal of Japanese troops from
Siberia,
Sakhalin, China, Korea, and Taiwan. A brutal suppression
of the
party followed. Radicals responded with an assassination
attempt on
Prince Regent Hirohito. The 1925 Peace Preservation Law
was a
direct response to the "dangerous thoughts" perpetrated by
communist elements in Japan.
The liberalization of election laws, also in 1925,
benefited
communist candidates even though the Japan Communist Party
itself
was banned. A new Peace Preservation Law in 1928, however,
further
impeded communist efforts by banning the parties they had
infiltrated. The police apparatus of the day was
ubiquitous and
quite thorough in attempting to control the socialist
movement
(see The Police System
, ch. 8). By 1926 the Japan Communist
Party had
been forced underground, by the summer of 1929 the party
leadership
had been virtually destroyed, and by 1933 the party had
largely
disintegrated.
Data as of January 1994
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