And the winner is…. NTV
The NTV election results won the race for viewers, claiming 26.4% of households…
(Still no match for ‘24 Hour TV’, which won the night before for NTV with 31.3%…)
The Japanese Communist Party took 9 seats in Sunday’s election, with almost 5 million votes (7% of the total). Astonishing that they could be so successful in a developed and supposedly well educated country such as Japan. Ampontan has a great post describing the Communist Manifesto (and poking plenty of holes in it…):
Well, the election is over, and as shown in the post below, the results were a massive win to the opposition DPJ. Just how big that win was gives rise to the title of this post…
With the result of the election in no doubt minutes after the polls closed (actually they haven’t been in [...]
Alliances and parties
Local seats
+/-
Block seats
+/-
Block votes
%
+/-
Total seats
+/-
Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) Minshutō – 民主党
221
+169
87
+26
29,784,743
42.4%
+11.4
308
+195
Social Democratic Party (SDP) Shamintō – 社民党
3
+2
4
-2
2,999,040
4.3%
-1.2
7
±0
People’s New Party (PNP) Kokuminshintō – 国民新党
3
+1
0
-2
1,218,020
1.7%
±0.0
3
-1
Anticipated DPJ-SDP-PNP Coalition
227
+172
91
+22
34,001,803
48.4%
+10.2
318
+194
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) Jimintō – 自民党
64
-155
55
-22
18,782,218
26.7%
-11.5
119
-177
New Komeito Party (NKP) [...]
Heading in to the election tonight, here is a brief summary of the positions of the various parties in the lower house prior to the election:
House of Representatives:
LDP 296 seats
DPJ 113 seats
NKP 31 seats
JCP 9 seats
SDP 7 seats
PNP 4 seats
NPN 1 seat
NPD 1 seat
After the 2007 Upper House election, the DPJ hold 109 of the [...]
A few days ago, James at Japan Probe presented us with ‘The worst political commercial ever?‘… This is the 15 second ad that he posted:
I also saw this one of Prime Minister Aso, and I’m trying to figure out whether its worse when he talks, or [...]
Today Japan go to the polls, and all expectations are that some time tonight we will see a new government elected. Could it be that Japan has finally developed a two-party system of government…?
I first came to Japan in 1992, and I was here for the short-lived attempt by Hosokawa to take over the government [...]
Welcome to guyjin.me. ’Guyjin’, of course, is a play on the word ‘gaijin’, which every foreigner has heard many times. I’m not going to get into a deep discussion of the pros and cons of the term here. Suffice it to say that I chose the name of this blog in an attempt [...]