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Tax Cuts Japan

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6-691: Tax Cuts Japan – Anti-TPP – Zero Nuclear Party ( 減税日本・反TPP・脱原発を実現する党 , Genzei Nippon · Han TTP · Datsu-Genpatsu o Jitsugen suru Tō ) commonly known as the Zero Nuclear Party in English-speaking countries and as Datsu-Genpatsu (脱原発, roughly "phase down nuclear power") in Japan, was a short-lived Japanese political party that was formed on 22 November 2012. Nagoya mayor Takashi Kawamura and Masahiko Yamada were co-presidents and Shizuka Kamei served as secretary-general. The party

12-623: The National Diet , either in the House of Representatives ( lower house ) or in the House of Councillors ( upper house ). The article also mentions political parties within the nation that either used to be within representation, or parties that currently are. Legal status as a political party ( seitō ) is tied to having five members in the Diet or one member and at least two percent nationally of either proportional or majoritarian vote in one of

18-639: The House of Representatives in an electoral district and on a proportional list, may take political donations from legal persons, i.e. corporations, and other benefits such as air time on public broadcaster NHK. Naruhito [REDACTED] Fumihito [REDACTED] Shigeru Ishiba ( LDP ) Second Ishiba Cabinet ( LDP – Komeito coalition ) [REDACTED] [REDACTED] Fukushiro Nukaga Kōichirō Genba [REDACTED] Masakazu Sekiguchi Hiroyuki Nagahama Saburo Tokura Kazuo Ueda Under Japanese law, all of

24-563: The parties below are "political organizations" ( seiji dantai ), not "political parties" ( seitō , see above). Current political parties that used to be in the Diet but are not currently represented: Japan has other minor parties not represented in Parliament (which have never been represented before), some are new, others with communist and socialist ideologies, as well as a few nationalist, reformist, and far-right parties. Some of them include: In 1940, all remaining political parties with

30-558: The three elections of the current members of the National Diet, i.e. the last House of Representatives general election and the last two House of Councillors regular elections. Political parties receive public party funding (¥ 250 per citizen, about ¥ 32 bill. in total per fiscal year, distributed according to recent national elections results – last HR general and last two HC regular elections – and Diet strength on January 1), are allowed to concurrently nominate candidates for

36-604: Was merged with other groups to form the Tomorrow Party of Japan on November 27, 2012. This article about a Japanese political party is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . List of political parties in Japan In Japan , any organization that supports a candidate needs to register itself as a political party. Each of these parties have some local or national influence. This article lists political parties in Japan with representation in

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