Yasuzo AragakiIt is a Japanese political term, which was run by the candidates for the presidential election of the Liberal Democratic Party in 2006 - Taro Aso and Yoshishi Tanigaki.
1. Yasuo Fukuda and Jinzo, each of these four people takes one word from their names. The four have successively served as presidents of the Liberal Democratic Party of JapanThree of the four (** Jin.
3. Yasuo Fukuda and Taro Aso) served as prime ministers of Japan in the following years.
1, Taro Aso
Taro Aso (born September 20, 1940), a politician of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan, is currently the vice president of the Liberal Democratic Party and the leader of the Aso faction, and has served as the Prime Minister of the Japanese Cabinet (the 92nd Prime Minister), Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance and Minister in charge of Finance (No.
He has served as a member of the House of Representatives for 14 terms since 1979, including the second, third, and fourth ** Cabinet and the Suga Cabinet), Minister of Foreign Affairs, Minister of Internal Affairs and Communications, Minister in charge of Economic and Fiscal Policy, Director-General of the Economic Planning Agency, President of the Liberal Democratic Party, Secretary-General of the Liberal Democratic Party, and Chairman of the Liberal Democratic Party's Political Research Committee.
Taro Aso was born in a celebrity, his maternal ancestors were the best among the generations, his father was a famous chaebol, and his sister Nobuko married the royal family. Prior to entering politics, Aso was the president of the family business, Aso Co., Ltd., where he successfully led the transformation of the company. In 1979, he was elected to the House of Representatives for the first time in his hometown of Fukuoka, and gradually grew into a powerful figure in the Liberal Democratic Party, successively serving as the director of the Economic Planning Agency, the minister in charge of economic and fiscal policy, the minister of internal affairs and communications, the minister of foreign affairs, the chairman of the Liberal Democratic Party Government Affairs Research Committee, and the secretary general of the Liberal Democratic Party. In 2008, he became the 23rd president of the Liberal Democratic Party and the 92nd prime minister, but he failed to reverse the weak situation of the Democratic Party during his tenure, and in the 45th general election of members of the House of Representatives held in 2009, he was defeated by the opposition Democratic Party of Japan, and the Liberal Democratic Party lost its ruling position again after 1993 and 1994.
In December 2012, the Liberal Democratic Party regained power in the 46th general election of members of the House of Representatives of Japan, and Taro Aso, as an important ally of Prime Minister Shinzo, has served as vice prime minister, finance minister, and finance minister since the second cabinet.
1. Ryutaro Hashimoto is another former prime minister who re-entered the cabinet, and at the same time, he is also another former prime minister and then vice prime minister after Kishigero Bihara.
On February 12, 2018, Taro Aso served as Finance Minister for a total of 1,875 days, breaking Miyazawa's 1,874 days and becoming the longest-serving finance minister in the post-World War II period. On October 4, 2021, he stepped down with the resignation of Suga's cabinet, serving a total of 3,205 days. Subsequently, after Fumio Kishida became president of the Liberal Democratic Party, Taro Aso became vice president of the Liberal Democratic Party.
He is currently the vice president of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan and is still active in Japan**.
2, Tanigaki Zhenichi
Yoshiichi Tanigaki (born March 7, 1945) is a Japanese politician. He served as Secretary-General of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) (47th term) and President of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) (24th). Tanigaki also served as Director General of the Science and Technology Agency (58th), Chairman of the Financial Revitalization Commission (1st), Chairman of the National Public Safety Commission (69th), Minister in charge of Industrial Revitalization, Minister of Finance, Chairman of the Liberal Democratic Party, Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (9th), and Minister of Justice (93rd). Tanigaki is the second LDP president in the history of the Liberal Democratic Party after Yohei Kono to fail to become prime minister.
In October 2005, Tanigaki was elected president of the Tanigaki faction. Later, he merged with the Koga faction, another branch of the Koikekai, and became the spokesperson of the faction. In 2012, it broke away from Koikekai again and established the Tanigaki Group (Youlin Association).
Tanigaki is a native of Fukuchiyama City, Kyoto Prefecture, and is a second-generation hereditary member of parliament (Ni-sen). His father, Tanigaki, served as Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, and Culture. He specializes in economic and fiscal policy.
In the 2009 Liberal Democratic Party presidential election, on September 28, with the support of a majority of factions and local governments, he won 300 out of 499 valid votes, defeating Taro Kono and Yasuki Nishimura to become the 24th president of the Liberal Democratic Party.
After assuming the position of party president, Tanigaki vowed to lead the LDP to regain power. During his tenure, the DPJ government went through three prime ministers, Yukio Hatoyama, Naoto Kan, and Yoshihiko Noda, and Tanigaki, as the leader of the largest opposition party, was criticized by many within the party for not doing his best to attack the DPJ regime and lack of leadership. In June 2012, the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the New Komeito Party (DPJ) reached a "three-party agreement between the People, the People's Republic of China and the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ)" to pass the Noda Cabinet's important bill on the integrated reform of the social security and taxation systems, which threatened to be passed due to the departure of Ichiro Ozawa. In August, it reached a three-party agreement with the Democratic Party on the "dissolution of the House of Representatives in the near future". In the LDP presidential election held in September of the same year, as ** approached, the LDP was ahead in various opinion polls, and the new president was likely to become the next prime minister. Tanigaki became the second president in the history of the Liberal Democratic Party after Yohei Kono to fail to become prime minister.
On December 26, 2012, Tanigaki became Minister of Justice for the second ** Cabinet. He stepped down on 3 September 2014.
On September 3, 2014, Yoshiichi Tanigaki was inaugurated as the 47th secretary general of the Liberal Democratic Party. For the first time in the history of the LDP, the former president of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has been appointed secretary-general (second-in-command) of the LDP.
On July 16, 2016, Yoshiichi Tanigaki was hospitalized for a cervical spine injury caused by cycling. On August 3, Shinzo appointed Toshihiro Nikai, chairman of the General Affairs Committee, as secretary-general.
3, Yasuo Fukuda
Yasuo Fukuda (born July 16, 1936) is a Japanese politician, the 91st Prime Minister of the Japanese Cabinet and the 22nd President of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan. From 2010 to 2018, he served as Chairman of the Boao Forum for Asia. After leaving office, he was reappointed as Chairman of the Advisory Committee of the Boao Forum for Asia.
Fukuda, the eldest son of former Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda, was born in Setagaya-ku, Tokyo, and returned to his hometown of Takasaki City, Gunma Prefecture during World War II, where he graduated from Waseda University's Department of Political Science and Economics. In 1990, he was first elected to the House of Representatives of Japan, and served as Chief Cabinet Secretary in the Yoshiro Mori Cabinet and Junichiro Koizumi Cabinet for 1,289 days, making him the second-highest-serving Chief Cabinet Secretary after Yoshihide Suga.
On September 23, 2007, former Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuo Fukuda (71) defeated Party Secretary General Taro Aso (67) and was elected the 22nd president of the Liberal Democratic Party.
Yasuo Fukuda was elected as the 91st Prime Minister at the plenary session of the House of Representatives on September 25, 2007, and a new cabinet was formed on the same day. Yasuo Fukuda is the eldest son of former Japanese Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda, so for the first time in Japan, two generations of prime ministers were born father and son.
At 9:30 p.m. on September 1, 2008, Yasuo Fukuda held a press conference at the Prime Minister's Office to announce his resignation as Prime Minister.
Yasuo Fukuda's son, Tatsuo Fukuda (born March 5, 1967), was born in Tokyo. A Japanese politician who has served as the chairman of the 4th term of the Liberal Democratic Party since October 2021, and a member of the House of Representatives (4th term). It belongs to the ** faction in the Liberal Democratic Party. In October 2021, Tatsuo Fukuda became the chairman of the General Affairs Committee of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan. He is currently the First Deputy Secretary-General of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan.
4, ** Jinsan
*Shinzo (September 21, 1954 – July 8, 2022) was a politician of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan, who served as Prime Minister (90th, 96th, 97th, 98th), President of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDJ) (21st and 25th), Chief Cabinet Secretary (72nd), and Secretary-General of the Liberal Democratic Party (41st). He belongs to the Seiwa Policy Research Association among the liberal democratic parties and became its 10th president in 2021. **Shinzo was born into a political family in Tokyo, and his native is Yamaguchi Prefecture. His grandfather was a member of the House of Representatives, and his father, Shintaro, was the Minister of Foreign Affairs. ** Shinzo, his maternal grandfather Nobusuke Kishi, and his maternal grandfather Eisaku Sato all served as prime ministers, and they are known as "a family of three ministers".
Beginning in 1993, Shinzo was elected to the House of Representatives for 10 consecutive terms in Yamaguchi Prefecture. In 2005, Junichiro Koizumi appointed him chief cabinet secretary, and the following year he was elected president of the Liberal Democratic Party and prime minister, the first prime minister born after World War II. During his tenure, he promoted diplomatic relations with neighboring countries, and after the pension record problem and the defeat in the House of Councillors election, he eventually resigned due to ulcerative colitis and was succeeded by Yasuo Fukuda. In 2012, he was re-elected as the president of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and led the LDP to power in the House of Representatives election in the same year, serving as prime minister for the second time. He continued to lead the Liberal Democratic Party to win a majority in many House of Representatives and House of Councillors elections, establishing a leadership pattern of "dominance", and becoming the longest-serving prime minister in Japan's constitutional history.
*Shinzo is a conservative right-wing politician who pushed for a number of domestic and foreign affairs during his tenure. On the economic front, he introduced the "** economics" reform policy, which led to economic growth through quantitative easing, economic stimulus and structural reforms, and later promoted social security policies. In defense diplomacy, Shinzo put forward a strategy of "values diplomacy" and "active pacifism" to strengthen the U.S.-Japan alliance and lead the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership and the "Arc of Freedom and Prosperity." * Shinzo strengthened his military and promoted the amendment of Article 9 of the Constitution of Japan, and expanded the right to collective self-defense through the Legislative System for Peace and Security of Japan. Jinzo has a hawkish view on historical understanding of war responsibility, and has promoted the revision of the Basic Law on Education.
*During his tenure, Shinzo actively promoted the U.S.-Japan alliance, reshaped Japan's role in geopolitics, and influenced Japan's political and economic structure and ideology. At the same time, economics has partly contributed to Japan's economic recovery, but it has not worked as well as expected and has led to inflation and prices. At the same time, during his tenure, he was also criticized and questioned by some people because of his nationalist stance and some policy propositions, as well as cabinet scandals such as the Moritomo School issue and the cherry blossom viewing party turmoil. In 2020, the 2019 coronavirus disease epidemic hit the Japanese economy, and the Summer Olympics were forced to be postponed, and the cabinet approval rate**. Subsequently, Shinzo resigned as prime minister due to ulcerative colitis and was replaced by Yoshihide Suga. After leaving office, Shinzo continued to serve as a member of the House of Representatives and continued to exert influence. In July 2022, Shinzo was assassinated at the age of 67 while giving an election speech in Nara City.