2012 Tokyo gubernatorial election

The 2012 Tokyo gubernatorial election took place on December 16, 2012, which was held on the same day as the general election.

2012 Tokyo gubernatorial election

← 2011 16 December 2012 2014 →
Turnout5,942,443 (62.6%)
 
Naoki Inose 2022-6-26(cropped).jpg
宇都宮健児 (cropped).png
Shigefumi Matsuzawa (cropped).jpg
Candidate Naoki Inose Kenji Utsunomiya Shigefumi Matsuzawa
Party Independent Independent Independent
Popular vote 4,338,936 968,960 956,063
Percentage 65.27% 14.58% 9.35%
Supported by LDP, NK TPJ, JCP, SDP, GJ, NSP, TSN DPJ, PLP, UP

Governor before election

Shintaro Ishihara
Independent

Elected Governor

Naoki Inose
Independent

Background edit

After long-term Governor Shintaro Ishihara suddenly resigned to return to national politics ahead of the then-looming next general election.[1] A field of nine candidates emerged, with the front-runner being Naoki Inose, who had been vice-governor under Ishihara from 2007 to 2012, and then acting governor after Ishihara's abrupt resignation. Inose vowed to follow Ishihara's policies.

Candidates edit

Campaign edit

Information campaign for the polls was administered by the Tokyo Metropolitan Election Administration Commission.[7][8] AKB48's Minami Takahashi, Tomomi Itano and Yui Yokoyama (also of NMB48) were appointed as image characters.[9]

Result edit

The result was a landslide victory for Inose, who received 4,338,936 votes, setting a new record for the total number of votes in a Tokyo gubernatorial election. The previous record was 3.61 million cast for the socialist Governor Ryokichi Minobe in 1971.[10]

Tokyo gubernatorial election, 2012[11]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent (Supported by Liberal Democratic, New Komeito, Restoration) Naoki Inose 4,338,936 65.27% N/A
Independent (Supported by Tomorrow, Communist, Social Democratic, Greens, New Socialist, Seikatsusha) Kenji Utsunomiya 968,960 14.58% N/A
Independent (Supported by Democrats, People's Life, Unity) Shigefumi Matsuzawa 621,278 9.35% N/A
Party for Preservation of Citizens' Lives Takashi Sasagawa 179,180 2.7% N/A
Independent Yoshiro Nakamatsu 129,406 1.95% N/A
Independent Shigenobu Yoshida 81,885 1.23% N/A
Happiness Realization Tokuma Suginomori 47,829 0.72% N/A
Smile Mac Akasaka 38,855 0.58%   0.50%
Independent Masaichi Igarashi 36,114 0.54% N/A
Turnout 5,942,443 62.6%   4.8%

References edit

  1. ^ a b The Japan Times Former head lawyer to run for Tokyo governor November 10, 2012
  2. ^ The Japan Times Mac who would be governor says: Smile
  3. ^ The Japan Times Inose declares Tokyo candidacy
  4. ^ The Daily Yomiuri Ex-Kanagawa gov. declares Tokyo bid
  5. ^ a b The Japan Times Campaign begins to succeed Ishihara
  6. ^ Mainichi Shimbun Nuclear policy splits parties into 2 camps for candidates in Tokyo governor race Archived 2013-02-18 at archive.today
  7. ^ msn/Sankei News, November 12, 2012: AKB48「こんどの都知事は、私が選ぶ。」 啓発の顔、コピー決まる Archived 2013-05-29 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Tokyo Metropolitan Election Administration Commission, November 12, 2012 press release: 12月16日投票東京都知事選挙のキャッチコピーとイメージキャラクターが決定しました。 Archived 2012-11-19 at the Wayback Machine [The Tokyo Metropolitan Election Administration Commission it is responsible for administering prefectural elections (governor and assembly) and the district segments of national elections (House of Representatives general, by- and repeat elections, House of Councillors regular, by- and repeat elections) in Tokyo, supervising Tokyo's 62 municipal election commissions that organize the actual voting process in their local jurisdiction; the Metropolitan commission is one of 47 member commissions of the federation of prefectural election administration commissions (to-dō-fu-ken senkyo kanri iinkai rengōkai), translated to English as "National Election Administration Committee" even though it doesn't administer any election in Japan, national or otherwise, only its 47 individual member commissions do; according to its own website (都道府県選挙管理委員会連合会とは), the federation serves as information exchange and as lobby group representing the prefectural commissions towards the National Diet and the central government, it organizes research and publishes information material; it is not to be confused with the central election administration committee (chūō senkyo kanrikai) that administers the proportional representation segments of national elections (House of Representatives general and House of Councillors regular election) and the confirmation referendum for Supreme Court judges, and provides general support for prefectural and municipal commissions; see Ministry of general affairs (English: Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications): なるほど!選挙 > 選挙管理機関 for a basic overview of election administration commissions in Japan.]
  9. ^ Japan Today AKB48 urge Tokyo residents to vote in gubernatorial election
  10. ^ The Japan Times Inose wins landslide victory in Tokyo December 18, 2012
  11. ^ "24 N s m I J [". Archived from the original on 2012-12-18. Retrieved 2012-12-21.