House of Councillors

35°40′35.5″N 139°44′40.5″E

House of Councillors

参議院

Sangiin
211th Session of the National Diet
Type
Type
Leadership
Hidehisa Otsuji, LDP (caucus: independent)
since 3 August 2022
Hiroyuki Nagahama, CDP (caucus: independent)
since 3 August 2022
Structure
Seats248
Political groups
Government (145)
  •   LDP (118)
  •   Kōmeitō (27)

Opposition (94)

Unaffiliated (8)

Vacant (1)

  •   Vacant (1)
Committees17 committees
Length of term
6 years
SalaryPresident: ¥2,170,000/m
Vice President: ¥1,584,000/m
Members: ¥1,294,000/m
Elections
Parallel voting:
Single non-transferable vote (148 seats)
Party-list proportional representation (100 seats)
Staggered elections
First election
20 April 1947
Last election
10 July 2022
Next election
July 2025
Meeting place
Chamber of the House of Councillors
Website
www.sangiin.go.jp

The House of Councillors (参議院, Sangiin) is the upper house of the National Diet of Japan. The House of Representatives is the lower house. The House of Councillors is the successor to the pre-war House of Peers. If the two houses disagree on matters of the budget, treaties, or the nomination of the prime minister, the House of Representatives can insist on its decision. In other decisions, the House of Representatives can override a vote of the House of Councillors only by a two-thirds majority of members present.

The House of Councillors has 248 members who each serve six-year terms, two years longer than those of the House of Representatives. Councillors must be at least 30 years old, compared with 25 years old in the House of Representatives. The House of Councillors cannot be dissolved, and terms are staggered so that only half of its membership is up for election every three years. Of the 121 members subject to election each time, 73 are elected from 45 districts by single non-transferable vote (SNTV) and 48 are elected from a nationwide list by proportional representation (PR) with open lists.[1]

Roles and responsibilities

Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko seated in the Chamber of the House of Councillors, with members of the imperial family, the cabinet, and prime minister Naoto Kan giving the government's speech in front of the assembled members of parliament (2010)

The power of House of Councillors is very similar to the Canadian Senate or the Irish Seanad.[2] In central issues, there is a "supremacy of the House of Representatives" (ja:衆議院の優越, Shūgiin no yūetsu): In the election of the prime minister, in the ratification of international treaties and on passing the budget, a decision by the House of Representatives always overrides House of Councillors dissent. And only the lower house can pass votes of no-confidence against the cabinet. All other legislation requires either the approval by majorities in both houses, an agreement in the conference committee of both houses or an additional override vote by two-thirds majority in the House of Representatives.[3][4] (No single party has ever won a two-thirds majority in the House of Representatives under the current constitution, although the LDP came close several times, as did the DPJ in 2009.) In other words: Controlling a majority in the House of Councillors and one third of the House of Representatives is enough for a united opposition to be able to block the passage of legislation. For certain important administrative nominations by the cabinet, the approval of both houses is required absolutely (although the laws containing this requirement could be changed by two-thirds lower house override as a "nuclear option"); and constitutional amendment proposals need two-thirds majorities in both the houses of the Diet to be submitted to the people in a national referendum.[2]

One additional constitutional role of the House of Councillors is to serve as functioning fully elected emergency legislature on its own during lower house election campaigns: While the House of Representatives is dissolved, the National Diet can't be convened, and therefore no law can be passed in regular procedure; but in urgent cases requiring parliamentary action (e.g. election management, provisional budgets, disaster response), an emergency session (緊急集会, kinkyū shūkai) of the House of Councillors can still be invoked to take provisional decisions for the whole Diet. Such decisions will become invalid unless confirmed by the House of Representatives as soon as the whole Diet convenes again.

The basic stipulations on the role of the House of Councillors are subject of chapter IV of the constitution.[5] Laws and rules containing more detailed provisions on parliamentary procedures and the relations between the two houses include the National Diet Law (国会法, Kokkai-hō),[6] the conference committee regulations (両院協議会規程, ryōin-kyōgikai kitei),[7] and the rules of each house (衆議院/参議院規則, Shūgiin/Sangiin kisoku).[8]

Constitutional practice

In practice, governments often tried to ensure legislative majorities, either by forming coalition governments with safe legislative majorities in the first place or by negotiating with part of the opposition, or avoided to submit bills with no prospects of passage,[9] so the House of Councillors rarely voted against the decisions reached by the lower house for much of postwar history: As the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), founded in 1955, often held majorities in both houses or was sufficiently close to control both houses together with independents and micro-parties for a long period, inter-chamber disagreement was rare during most of the 1955 System.

After the opposition victory in the 1989 election, the relative importance of the House of Councillors initially increased, as the LDP continued to govern alone and did not hold a two-thirds majority in the House of Representatives. Crucial legislation had to be negotiated with parts of the opposition. The most prominent example was the so-called "PKO Diet" (ja:PKO国会, PKO Kokkai) of 1992 when the LDP negotiated and passed the peace-keeping operations bill with centre-left/right-of-JSP opposition parties (DSP and Kōmeitō) against fierce opposition from JSP and JCP; the PKO law became the base for the Self-Defense Forces' first (ground) deployment abroad as part of the UN mission in Cambodia. After the 1993 House of Representatives election, with the exception of a brief minority government in 1994, coalition governments or the confidence and supply arrangement during the restored LDP single-party government ensured legislative government majorities until the opposition victory in the 1998 House of Councillors election which led to the formation of another coalition government by 1999.

The legislative two-thirds override power of the House of Representatives was never used between 1950s and 2008 when the LDP-Kōmeitō coalition government had lost the House of Councillors majority in the 2007 election, but did control a two-thirds majority in the House of Representatives since 2005. After that, it has been used somewhat more frequently (see ja:衆議院の再議決, Shūgin no saikaketsu, ~"Override decisions by the House of Representatives" for a list). If a government controls a two-thirds majority in the House of Representatives and is willing to use it, the House of Councillors can only delay a bill, but not prevent passage.

Opposition control of the House of Councillors is often summarized by the term nejire Kokkai (ja:ねじれ国会, "twisted" or "skewed" Diet). Setting aside the immediate postwar years, when many governments were in the minority in the upper house, but the strongest force, the centrist Ryokufūkai, was not in all-out opposition to either centre-left or centre-right governments and willing to cooperate, the Diet was "twisted" from 1989 to 1993, 1998–1999, 2007–2009, and most recently 2010–2013.

"Gridlock" and reform proposals

In recent years, many constitutional revision advocates call for reforming the role of the House of Councillors ("carbon copy" of the House of Representatives or "recalcitrant naysayer") or abolishing it altogether to "prevent political paralysis", after the recently more frequent twisted Diets have seen an increase in inter-chamber friction/"political nightmare"s.[10][11] Examples of high-stakes, internationally noted conflicts in recent twisted Diets:

  • In 2008, two nominees for BoJ governor by the Fukuda Cabinet (Toshirō Mutō, Kōji Tanami) were rejected by the DPJ-led opposition in the House of Councillors, and the SDF naval support mission for NATO/OEF in the Indian Ocean had to be interrupted for one month while the extension of the anti-terrorism law was delayed by the extended legislative proceedings necessary to override the House of Councillors rejection.
  • In 2011, the Kan Cabinet struggled to pass a renewable energy bill and a bond ceiling increase (unlike the budget itself subject to the normal legislative procedure) against the LDP-led opposition majority in the House of Councillors until it negotiated a deal with the LDP in exchange for child allowance reform and the cabinet's resignation which Kan had already announced, but conditioned on the passage of the bills.[12][13]

Membership and elections

Article 102 of the Japanese Constitution provided that half of the councillors elected in the first House of Councillors election in 1947 would be up for re-election three years later in order to introduce staggered six-year terms.

The House initially had 250 seats. Two seats were added to the House in 1970 after the agreement on the repatriation of Okinawa, increasing the House to a total of 252.[14] Legislation aimed at addressing malapportionment that favoured less-populated prefectures was introduced in 2000; this resulted in ten seats being removed (five each at the 2001 and 2004 elections), bringing the total number of seats to 242.[14] Further reforms to address malapportionment took effect in 2007 and 2016, but did not change the total number of members in the house.[14]

From 1947 to 1983, the House had 100 seats allocated to a national block (全国区, zenkoku-ku), of which fifty seats were allocated in each election.[14] It was originally intended to give nationally prominent figures a route to the House without going through local electioneering processes. Some national political figures, such as feminists Shidzue Katō and Fusae Ichikawa and former Imperial Army general Kazushige Ugaki, were elected through the block, along with a number of celebrities such as comedian Yukio Aoshima (later Governor of Tokyo), journalist Hideo Den and actress Yūko Mochizuki. Shintaro Ishihara won a record 3 million votes in the national block in the 1968 election. The national block was last seen in the 1980 election and was replaced with a nationwide proportional representation block in the 1983 election.[14] The national proportional representation block was reduced to 96 members in the 2000 reforms.[14]

Current composition

Composition of the House of Councillors of the National Diet of Japan (as of 30 August 2023, before 212th National Diet)[15]
Caucus (English name)[16]
(domestic name)
Parties Members
Term Total
29 July 2019 –
28 July 2025
(elected 2019,
up 2025)
26 July 2022 –
25 July 2028
(elected 2022,
up 2028)
PR SNTV/FPTP Subtotal PR SNTV/FPTP Subtotal
Government 264268 245276 144
Liberal Democratic Party
Jiyūminshutō
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) 193554 184563 117
Komeito
Kōmeitō
Komeito 7714 6713 27
Opposition 232649 252045 94
The Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan and Social Democratic Party
Rikken-minshu / Shamin
Constitutional Democratic Party (CDP)
Social Democratic Party (SDP)
Independents
81422 81018 40
Nippon Ishin (Japan Innovation Party)
Nippon Ishin no Kai
Nippon Ishin no Kai 549 8412 21
Democratic Party For the People and The Shin-Ryokufukai
Kokumin-minshutō / Shin-Ryokufūkai
Democratic Party for the People (DPFP)
Independents
347 336 13
Japanese Communist Party
Nihon Kyōsantō
Japanese Communist Party (JCP) 437 314 11
Reiwa Shinsengumi
Reiwa Shinsengumi
Reiwa Shinsengumi 202 213 5
The Party to Protect People from NHK
NHK kara kokumin o mamoru tō
Seijika Joshi 48 Party 101 101 2
Okinawa Whirlwind
Okinawa no Kaze
Okinawa Social Mass Party 011 011 2
Independents (government & opposition) 145 123 8
Independents
Members not affiliated with any parliamentary caucus
President:
Hidehisa Otsuji (LDP)
Vice President:
Hiroyuki Nagahama (CDP)
Sanseitō 1
Independents 5
145 123 8
Total 5072122 5074124 246
Vacant: Tokushima-Kōchi in the 2019 class (special election due 22 October 2023),
one Kanagawa seat in the 2019 class (no separate by-election unless more than 25% of the district in that class are vacant)[17]
N/A 022 000 2

For a list of individual members, see the List of members of the Diet of Japan#House of Councillors.

Latest election

List of House of Councillors regular elections

20th century

ElectionCabinetPrime MinisterDateTurnoutTotal
seats
Elected
seats
Term
expiration
date
Majority party / Seats shareEmperor
(Reign)
1st Yoshida IShigeru Yoshida20 April 194761.12%2502502 May 1953 Socialist4718.80% Shōwa
(1926–1989)
2nd Yoshida III4 June 195072.19%1253 June 1956 Liberal7630.40%
3rd Yoshida IV24 April 195363.18%2 May 1959 9337.20%
4th I. Hatoyama IIIIchirō Hatoyama8 July 195662.11%7 July 1962 Liberal Democratic12248.80%
5th Kishi IINobusuke Kishi2 June 195958.75%1 June 1965 13252.80%
6th Ikeda IIHayato Ikeda1 July 196268.22%7 July 1968 14256.80%
7th Satō IEisaku Satō4 July 196567.02%1 July 1971 14055.77%
8th Satō II7 July 196868.94%7 July 1974 14254.80%
9th Satō III27 June 197159.24%25212610 July 1977 13152.61%
10th K. Tanaka IIKakuei Tanaka7 July 197473.20%7 July 1980 12650.40%
11th T. FukudaTakeo Fukuda10 July 197768.49%9 July 1983 12449.79%
12th Ōhira IIMasayoshi Ōhira22 June 198074.54%7 July 1986 13554.00%
13th Nakasone IYasuhiro Nakasone26 June 198357.00%9 July 1989 13754.36%
14th Nakasone II (R2)6 July 198671.36%7 July 1992 14356.74%
15th UnoSōsuke Uno23 July 198965.02%25212622 July 1995 10943.25% Akihito
(Heisei)

(1989–2019)
16th MiyazawaKiichi Miyazawa26 July 199250.72%25 July 1998 10742.46%
17th MurayamaTomiichi Murayama23 July 199544.52%22 July 2001 11144.04%
18th Hashimoto II (R)Ryutaro Hashimoto12 July 199858.84%25 July 2004 10340.87%
ElectionCabinetPrime MinisterDateTurnoutTotal
seats
Elected
seats
Term
expiration
date
Majority party / Seats shareEmperor
(Reign)

21st century

ElectionCabinetPrime MinisterDateTurnoutTotal
seats
Elected
seats
Term
expiration
date
Majority party / Seats shareEmperor
(Reign)
19th Koizumi IJunichiro Koizumi29 July 200156.44%24712128 July 2007 Liberal Democratic11144.93% Akihito
(Heisei)

(1989–2019)
20th Koizumi II11 July 200456.57%24225 July 2010 11547.52%
21st S. Abe IShinzo Abe29 July 200758.64%28 July 2013 Democratic10945.04%
22nd KanNaoto Kan11 July 201057.92%25 July 2016 10643.80%
23rd S. Abe IIShinzo Abe21 July 201352.61%28 July 2019 Liberal Democratic11547.52%
24th S. Abe III (R1)10 July 201654.70%25 July 2022 12150.00%
25th S. Abe IV (R1)21 July 201948.80%24512428 July 2025 11346.12% Naruhito
(Reiwa)

(2019–present)
26th Kishida IIFumio Kishida10 July 202252.05%24825 July 2028 11947.98%
ElectionCabinetPrime MinisterDateTurnoutTotal
seats
Elected
seats
Term
expiration
date
Majority party / Seats shareEmperor
(Reign)

See also

Notes

    •   CDP (37)
    •   SDP (2)
    •   Independent (1)
    •   DPP (10)
    •   Independent (3)

References

Specific
  1. Hayes 2009, p. 50
  2. Fahey, Rob (18 July 2019). "Japan Explained: The House of Councilors - Tokyo Review". Archived from the original on 16 April 2021. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  3. House of Representatives: Diet functions: Diagram of (the) Legislative Procedure Archived 2021-09-12 at the Wayback Machine
  4. Thies M.F., Yanai Y. (2013) Governance with a Twist: How Bicameralism Affects Japanese Lawmaking. In: Pekkanen R., Reed S.R., Scheiner E. (eds) Japan Decides 2012. Palgrave Macmillan, London.
  5. Text (in unreformed script) Archived 2021-10-17 at the Wayback Machine and English translation Archived 2021-03-08 at the Wayback Machine, Wikisource
  6. Text Archived 2021-06-28 at the Wayback Machine and English translation Archived 2021-10-16 at the Wayback Machine, House of Councillors
  7. Text Archived 2021-05-12 at the Wayback Machine, House of Councillors
  8. HC rules: Text Archived 2021-11-09 at the Wayback Machine and English translation Archived 2021-11-20 at the Wayback Machine, House of Councillors; HR rules: Text Archived 2021-09-23 at the Wayback Machine, House of Representatives.
  9. Thies M.F., Yanai Y. (2014): Bicameralism vs. Parliamentarism: Lessons from Japan's Twisted Diet, Journal of Electoral Studies 30 (2), 60-74. (J-STAGE Archived 2021-09-13 at the Wayback Machine)
  10. Reiko, Oyama (30 June 2015). "The Rightful Role of the House of Councillors". nippon.com (Nippon Foundation). Archived from the original on 18 October 2021. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  11. Takenaka Harukata, July 20, 2011: Why Japanese Politics Is at a Standstill Archived 2021-09-12 at the Wayback Machine, nippon.com (Nippon Foundation), retrieved September 12, 2021.
  12. Risa Maeda, Shinichi Saoshiro, Reuters, July 5, 2011: Japan opposition sets conditions for energy bill Archived 2021-09-12 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved September 12, 2021.
  13. Hiroko Tabuchi, The New York Times, August 23, 2011: Japan's Prime Minister Likely to Resign, Minister Says Archived 2021-09-12 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved September 12, 2021.
  14. 参議院議員選挙制度の変遷 [Changes to the electoral system of the House of Councillors] (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 27 July 2018. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  15. "会派名及び会派別所属議員数". 参議院 House of Councillors, The National Diet of Japan. 2023. Retrieved 2023-09-27.
  16. "Strength of the Political Groups in the House of Councillors". House of Councillors. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  17. Kanagawa Shimbun, August 30, 2023: 自民・島村大参院議員が死去、神奈川選挙区で2期目, retrieved September 17, 2023.
Bibliography
  • Hayes, L. D., 2009. Introduction to Japanese Politics. 5th ed. New York: M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 978-0-7656-2279-2
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