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Junichiro Koizumi
小泉 純一郎
Official portrait, 2001
Prime Minister of Japan
In office
26 April 2001 – 26 September 2006
MonarchAkihito
Preceded byYoshirō Mori
Succeeded byShinzo Abe
President of the Liberal Democratic Party
In office
20 April 2001 – 20 September 2006
Vice PresidentTaku Yamasaki
Secretary-General
Preceded byYoshirō Mori
Succeeded byShinzo Abe
Minister of Health and Welfare
In office
7 November 1996 – 29 July 1998
Prime MinisterRyutaro Hashimoto
Preceded byNaoto Kan
Succeeded bySohei Miyashita
In office
27 December 1988 – 10 August 1989
Prime Minister
Preceded byTakao Fujimoto
Succeeded bySaburo Toida
Minister of Post and Telecommunications
In office
12 December 1992 – 20 July 1993
Prime MinisterKiichi Miyazawa
Preceded byHideo Watanabe
Succeeded byKiichi Miyazawa
In office
10 December 1972 – 21 July 2009
Preceded bymulti-member district
Succeeded byShinjirō Koizumi
Constituency
Personal details
Born (1942-01-08) 8 January 1942 (age 82)
Yokosuka, Kanagawa, Japan
Political partyLiberal Democratic
Spouse
(m. 1978; div. 1982)
Children
Parent(s)Jun'ya Koizumi (father)
Yoshie Koizumi (mother)
RelativesKoizumi Matajirō (grandfather)
Alma mater

Junichiro Koizumi (/kɔɪˈzmi/;[1][2][3] 小泉 純一郎, Koizumi Jun'ichirō [ko.iꜜzɯmi (d)ʑɯɰ̃.iꜜtɕiɾoː]; born 8 January 1942) is a Japanese retired politician who served as Prime Minister of Japan and president of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) from 2001 to 2006. He retired from politics in 2009. He is the sixth-longest serving Prime Minister in Japanese history.[4]

Widely seen as a maverick leader of the LDP upon his election to the position in 2001, Koizumi became known as a neoliberal economic reformer, focusing on reducing Japan's government debt and the privatisation of its postal service. In the 2005 election, Koizumi led the LDP to win one of the largest parliamentary majorities in modern Japanese history. Koizumi also attracted international attention through his deployment of the Japan Self-Defense Forces to Iraq, and through his visits to the Yasukuni Shrine that fueled diplomatic tensions with neighbouring China and South Korea. Koizumi resigned as prime minister in 2006.

Although Koizumi maintained a low profile for several years after he left office, he returned to national attention in 2013 as an advocate for abandoning nuclear power in Japan, in the wake of the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster, which contrasted with the pro-nuclear views espoused by the LDP governments both during and after Koizumi's term in office.[5]

Early life

[edit]

Koizumi is a third-generation politician of the Koizumi family. His father, Jun'ya Koizumi, was director general of the Japan Defense Agency and a member of the House of Representatives. His grandfather, Koizumi Matajirō, called "Tattoo Minister" because of a large tattoo on his body, was Minister of Posts and Telecommunications under Prime Ministers Hamaguchi and Wakatsuki and an early advocate of postal privatization.

Born in Yokosuka, Kanagawa on 8 January 1942, Koizumi was educated at Yokosuka High School. He graduated with a Bachelor of Economics degree from Keio University. He attended University College London before returning to Japan in August 1969 upon the death of his father.

He stood for election to the lower house in December; however, he did not earn enough votes to win election as a Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) representative. In 1970, he was hired as a secretary to Takeo Fukuda, who was Minister of Finance at the time and was elected as prime minister in 1976.

In the general elections of December 1972, Koizumi was elected as a member of the Lower House for Kanagawa's 2nd district, a seat previously held by his father. He joined Fukuda's faction within the LDP. Since then, he has been re-elected ten times.

Member of House of Representatives

[edit]
Koizumi as Health Minister, 1997

Koizumi gained his first senior post in 1979 as Parliamentary Vice Minister of Finance, and his first ministerial post in 1988 as Minister of Health and Welfare under Prime Ministers Noboru Takeshita and Sōsuke Uno. He held cabinet posts again in 1992 (Minister of Posts and Telecommunications in the Miyazawa cabinet) and 1996–1998 (Minister of Health and Welfare in the Hashimoto cabinets).

In 1994, with the LDP in opposition, Koizumi became part of a new LDP faction, Shinseiki, made up of younger and more motivated parliamentarians led by Taku Yamasaki, Koichi Kato and Koizumi, a group popularly dubbed "YKK" after the zipper manufacturer YKK.[6]

After Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa resigned in 1994 and the LDP returned to power in a coalition government, Koizumi and Hosokawa teamed up with Shusei Tanaka of New Party Sakigake in a strategic dialogue across party lines regarding Japan becoming a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council. Although this idea was not popular within the LDP and never came to fruition, Koizumi and Hosokawa maintained a close working relationship across party lines, with Hosokawa tacitly serving as Koizumi's personal envoy to China during times of strained Sino-Japanese relations.[7]

Koizumi competed for the presidency of the LDP in September 1995 and July 1998, but he gained little support losing decisively to Ryutaro Hashimoto and then Keizō Obuchi, both of whom had broader bases of support within the party. However, after Yamasaki and Kato were humiliated in a disastrous attempt to force a vote of no confidence against Prime Minister Yoshirō Mori in 2000, Koizumi became the last remaining credible member of the YKK trio, which gave him leverage over the reform-minded wing of the party.

On 24 April 2001, Koizumi was elected president of the LDP. He was initially considered an outside candidate against Hashimoto, who was running for his second term as prime minister. However, in the first poll of prefectural party organizations, Koizumi won 87 to 11 percent; in the second vote of Diet members, Koizumi won 51 to 40 percent. He defeated Hashimoto by a final tally of 298 to 155 votes.[8] He was made Prime Minister of Japan on 26 April, and his coalition secured 78 of 121 seats in the Upper House elections in July.

Prime minister

[edit]

Domestic policy

[edit]

Within Japan, Koizumi pushed for new ways to revitalise the moribund economy, aiming to act against bad debts with commercial banks, privatize the postal savings system, and reorganize the factional structure of the LDP. He spoke of the need for a period of painful restructuring in order to improve the future. To design policy initiatives in 2001 he used the new Council on Economic and Fiscal Policy (Keizai Zaisei Seisaku Tanto Daijin) or CEFP. It issued an annual planning document, "Basic Policies for Economic and Fiscal Management and Reform". It planned a major reorganization of the central government, and shaped economic policy in cooperation with key cabinet members. To meet the challenge of economic stagnation CEFP took an integrated approach, a worldwide economic view, and, promoted greater transparency; its philosophy was neoliberal.[9]

In the fall of 2002, Koizumi appointed Keio University economist and frequent television commentator Heizō Takenaka as Minister of State for Financial Services and head of the Financial Services Agency (FSA) to fix the country's banking crisis. Bad debts of banks were dramatically cut with the NPL ratio of major banks approaching half the level of 2001. The Japanese economy has been through a slow but steady recovery, and the stock market has dramatically rebounded. The GDP growth for 2004 was one of the highest among G7 nations, according to the International Monetary Fund and Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Takenaka was appointed as a Postal Reform Minister in 2004 for the privatization of Japan Post, operator of the country's Postal Savings system.[10]

Koizumi moved the LDP away from its traditional rural agrarian base toward a more urban, neoliberal core, as Japan's population grew in major cities and declined in less populated areas, although under current purely geographical districting, rural votes in Japan are still many times more powerful than urban ones. In addition to the privatization of Japan Post (which many rural residents fear will reduce their access to basic services such as banking), Koizumi also slowed down the LDP's heavy subsidies for infrastructure and industrial development in rural areas. These tensions made Koizumi a controversial but popular figure within his own party and among the Japanese electorate.[10] Considering both his neoliberal policies and his appeal to populist ideas, Koizumi's political ideology has been characterized "as a populist version of neoliberalism (or as a variant of the populist right) rather than neoliberal populism."[11]

Foreign policy

[edit]
Japanese Prime Minister Koizumi and U.S. President George W. Bush meet at the White House on 25 September 2001.
Koizumi meets with Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad on 21 May 2002.

Although Koizumi's foreign policy was focused on closer relations with the United States and UN-centered diplomacy, which were adopted by all of his predecessors, he went further, supporting the US policies in the War on Terrorism. He decided to deploy the Japan Self-Defense Forces to Iraq, which was the first military mission in active foreign war zones since the end of the World War II. Many Japanese commentators indicated that the favorable US-Japan relation was based on the Koizumi's personal friendship with the US President George W. Bush. White House officials described the first meeting between Koizumi and Bush at Camp David as "incredibly warm", with the two men playing catch with a baseball.[12] Since leaving office, he has defended his decision to send Japanese troops to Iraq.[13] In the North Korean abductions and nuclear development issues, Koizumi took more assertive attitudes than his predecessors.[14]

Self-Defense Forces policy

[edit]

Although Koizumi did not initially campaign on the issue of defense reform,[8] he approved the expansion of the Japan Self-Defense Forces (JSDF) and in October 2001 they were given greater scope to operate outside of the country. Some of these troops were dispatched to Iraq. Koizumi's government also introduced a bill to upgrade the Defense Agency to ministry status; finally, the Defense Agency became the Japanese Ministry of Defense on 9 January 2007.[15]

Visits to Yasukuni Shrine

[edit]

Koizumi has often been noted for his controversial visits to the Yasukuni Shrine, starting on 13 August 2001. He visited the shrine six times as prime minister. Because the shrine honors Japan's war dead, which also include many convicted Japanese war criminals and 14 executed Class A war criminals, these visits drew strong condemnation and protests from both Japan's neighbours, mainly China and South Korea, and many Japanese citizens. China and South Korea's people hold bitter memories of Japanese invasion and occupation during the first half of the 20th century. China and South Korea refused to have their representatives meet Koizumi in Japan and their countries. There were no mutual visits between Chinese and Japanese leaders from October 2001, and between South Korean and Japanese leaders from June 2005. The standstill ended when the next prime minister Abe visited China and South Korea in October 2006.

In China, the visits led to massive anti-Japanese riots. The president, ruling and opposition parties, and much of the media of South Korea openly condemned Koizumi's pilgrimages.[16] Many Koreans applauded the president's speeches criticizing Japan, despite the South Korean President's low popularity. When asked about the reaction, Koizumi said the speeches were "for the domestic (audience)".

Koizumi with Kofi Annan, George W. Bush and Vladimir Putin, 20 July 2001

Although Koizumi signed the shrine's visitor book as "Junichiro Koizumi, the Prime Minister of Japan", he claimed that his visits were as a private citizen and not an endorsement of any political stance.[17] China and Korea considered this excuse insufficient. Several journals and news reports in Japan, such as one published by Kyodo News Agency on 15 August 2006, questioned Koizumi's statement of private purpose, as he recorded his position on the shrine's guestbook as prime minister. He visited the shrine annually in fulfillment of a campaign pledge. Koizumi's last visit as prime minister was on 15 August 2006, fulfilling a campaign pledge to visit on the anniversary of Japan's surrender in World War II.[18]

Eleven months after his resignation as prime minister, Koizumi revisited the shrine on 15 August 2007, to mark the 62nd anniversary of Japan's surrender in World War II. His 2007 visit attracted less attention from the media than his prior visits while he was in office.[19][20]

Statements on World War II

[edit]

On 15 August 2005, the sixtieth anniversary of the end of World War II, Koizumi publicly stated that "I would like to express keen remorse and heartfelt apologies" and vowed Japan would never again take "the path to war".[21]

Popularity

[edit]
Koizumi meets children in Sea Island, Georgia, shortly before the 2004 G8 summit.

Koizumi was an extremely popular leader at certain points in his tenure. His outspoken nature and colourful past contributed to that, and his nicknames included "Lionheart" and "Maverick".[8] During his time in office, the Japanese public referred to him as Jun-chan (the suffix "chan" in the Japanese language is used as a term of familiarity, typically between children, "Jun" is a contraction of Junichiro). In June 2001, he enjoyed an approval rating of 80 percent.[22]

In January 2002, Koizumi fired his Foreign Minister Makiko Tanaka, replacing her with Yoriko Kawaguchi.[23] Tanaka had enjoyed high public approval ratings. A few days before her dismissal, when she was filmed crying after a dispute with government officials, Koizumi generated controversy with his statement "tears are women's ultimate weapons". Following an economic slump and a series of LDP scandals that claimed the career of YKK member Koichi Kato, by April Koizumi's popularity rating had fallen 30 percentage points since his nomination as prime minister.[24]

Koizumi was re-elected in 2003 and his popularity surged as the economy recovered. His proposal to cut pension benefits as a move to fiscal reform turned out to be highly unpopular. Two visits to North Korea to solve the issue of abducted Japanese nationals only somewhat[citation needed] raised his popularity, as he could not secure several abductees' returns to Japan. In the House of Councilors elections in 2004, the LDP performed only marginally[citation needed] better than the opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), winning 32 more seats than the latter obtained.

In 2005, the House of Councilors rejected the contentious postal privatization bills. Koizumi previously made it clear that he would dissolve the lower house if the bill failed to pass. The Democratic Party, while expressing support for the privatization, made a tactical vote against the bill. Fifty-one LDP members also either voted against the bills or abstained.

On 8 August 2005, Koizumi, as promised, dissolved the House of Representatives and called for snap elections. He expelled rebel LDP members for not supporting the bill. The LDP's chances for success were initially uncertain; the secretary general of New Komeito (a junior coalition partner with Koizumi's Liberal Democratic Party) said that his party would entertain forming a coalition government with the Democratic Party of Japan if the DPJ took a majority in the House of Representatives.[25]

Koizumi's popularity rose almost twenty points after he dissolved the House and expelled rebel LDP members. Opinion polls ranked the government's approval ratings between 58 and 65 percent. The electorate saw the election in terms of a vote for or against reform of the postal service, which the Democratic Party and rebel LDP members were seen as being against.[citation needed]

The September 2005 elections were the LDP's largest victory since 1986, giving the party a large majority in the House of Representatives and nullifying opposing voices in the House of Councilors. In the following Diet session, the last to be held under Koizumi's government, the LDP passed 82 of its 91 proposed bills, including postal privatization.[15] A number of Koizumi-supported candidates known as "Koizumi Children" joined the Diet in this election and supported successive LDP governments until the 2009 elections, when most[citation needed] were defeated.

Retirement

[edit]

Koizumi announced that he would step down from office in 2006, per LDP rules, and would not personally choose a successor as many LDP prime ministers have in the past. On 20 September 2006, Shinzo Abe was elected to succeed Koizumi as president of the LDP. Abe succeeded Koizumi as prime minister on 26 September 2006.

Koizumi remained in the Diet through the administrations of Abe and Yasuo Fukuda, but announced his retirement from politics on 25 September 2008, shortly following the election of Taro Aso as prime minister. He retained his Diet seat until the next general election, when his son Shinjiro was elected into the same seat representing the Kanagawa 11th district in 2009.[4] Koizumi supported Yuriko Koike in the LDP leadership election held earlier in September 2008, but Koike placed a distant third.[26]

Since leaving office as prime minister, Koizumi has not granted a single request for an interview or television appearance, although he has given speeches and had private interactions with journalists.[27]

Anti-nuclear advocacy

[edit]

Koizumi returned to the national spotlight in October 2013, after seven years of largely avoiding attention, when he gave a speech to business executives in Nagoya in which he stated: "We should aim to be nuclear-free... If the Liberal Democratic Party were to adopt a zero-nuclear policy, then we'd see a groundswell of support for getting rid of nuclear energy." He recalled Japan's reconstruction in the wake of World War II and called for the country to "unite toward a dream of achieving a society based on renewable energy."[5]

Koizumi had been a proponent of nuclear power throughout his term as prime minister, and was one of the first pro-nuclear politicians to change his stance on the issue in the wake of the Fukushima disaster of 2011. His dramatic remarks were widely covered in the Japanese media, with some tabloids speculating that he may break away from the LDP to form a new party with his son Shinjiro.[5] Economy Minister Akira Amari characterized Koizumi's stance as pure but simplistic, while other LDP administration officials downplayed the potential impact of Koizumi's views. Former prime minister Naoto Kan, however, expressed hope that Koizumi's status as then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's "boss" would help put pressure on the government to minimize or eliminate nuclear power in Japan.[28]

Koizumi defended his change of stance, stating in November that "it is overly optimistic and much more irresponsible to think nuclear power plants can be maintained just with the completion of disposal facilities... We had failed to secure sites for final disposal even before an accident occurred," concluding that "it's better to spend money on developing natural energy resources—citizens are more likely to agree with that idea—than using such large amounts of expenses and energy to advance such a feckless project [as nuclear power]."[29] He explained that in August, he had visited a nuclear waste disposal facility in Finland, where he learned that nuclear waste would have to be sealed up for 100,000 years. A poll by the Asahi Shimbun in November 2013 found that 54% of the public supported Koizumi's anti-nuclear statements.[30] Koizumi told one reporter that he felt lied to by the Federation of Electric Power Companies of Japan, which characterized nuclear power as a safe alternative to fossil fuels, stating that "we certainly had no idea how difficult it is to control nuclear energy."[27]

Koizumi reportedly approached Morihiro Hosokawa, who served as prime minister in an anti-LDP coalition cabinet in the 1990s, to run for Governor of Tokyo in the February 2014 gubernatorial election on the platform of opposing the Abe government's pro-nuclear policy.[31][32] Hosokawa ran in the election with Koizumi's support, but lost to the LDP-supported candidate Yōichi Masuzoe. Koizumi and Hosokawa continued their collaboration in the wake of this defeat, organizing an anti-nuclear forum to be held in May 2014.[33]

Koizumi traveled to the United States in 2016 in support of a lawsuit by Operation Tomodachi participants who claimed illness from radiation exposure caused by the Fukushima disaster.[34]

Personal life

[edit]

Koizumi lives in Yokosuka, Kanagawa.[35]

Family

[edit]

Koizumi married 21-year-old university student Kayoko Miyamoto in 1978. The couple had been formally introduced to each other as potential spouses, a common practice known as omiai. The wedding ceremony at the Tokyo Prince Hotel was attended by about 2,500 people, including Takeo Fukuda (then Prime Minister), and featured a wedding cake shaped like the National Diet Building. The marriage ended in divorce in 1982, as Kayoko was reportedly unhappy with her married life for several reasons.[36] After this divorce, Koizumi never married again, saying that divorce consumed ten times more energy than marriage.[37]

Koizumi had custody of two of his three sons: Kōtarō Koizumi and Shinjirō Koizumi, who were reared by one of his sisters. Shinjiro is the representative for Kanagawa's 11th district, a position his father has also filled, while Kotaro is an actor. The youngest son, Yoshinaga Miyamoto, now a graduate of Keio University, was born following the divorce[38] and did not meet Koizumi for many years. Yoshinaga is known to have attended one of Koizumi's rallies, but was turned away from trying to meet his father. He was also turned away from attending his paternal grandmother's funeral.[39] Koizumi's ex-wife Kayoko Miyamoto also asked unsuccessfully several times to meet their two eldest sons.[40] Yoshinaga met his father and brothers for the first time in 2010, at a meeting arranged by Shinjiro. Koizumi and his two elder sons also attended Yoshinaga's wedding in 2013.[41]

Koizumi is known to have a cousin in Brazil, and was overwhelmed to the point of tears when he visited Brazil in 2004 and was met by a group of Japanese immigrants.[27]

Interests

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Koizumi, hosted by U.S. President George W. Bush, at Graceland in 2006

Koizumi is a fan of German composer Richard Wagner and has released a CD of his favorite pieces by contemporary Italian composer Ennio Morricone.[42] He is also a fan of the heavy metal band X Japan, with the LDP having even used their song "Forever Love" in television commercials in 2001.[43][44] It was also reported that he was influential in getting the museum honoring X Japan's deceased guitarist Hide made.[45]

Koizumi is also a noted fan of Elvis Presley, with whom he shares a birthday (8 January). In 2001, he released a collection of his favorite Presley songs on CD, with his comments about each song.[46] His brother is Senior Advisor of the Tokyo Elvis Presley Fan Club. Koizumi and his brother helped finance a statue of Presley in Tokyo's Harajuku district. On 30 June 2006, Koizumi visited Presley's estate, Graceland, accompanied by U.S. President George W. Bush, and First Lady Laura Bush. After arriving in Memphis aboard Air Force One, they headed to Graceland. While there, Koizumi briefly sang a few bars of his favourite Presley tunes, whilst warmly impersonating Presley, and wearing Presley's trademark oversized golden sunglasses.[47]

Koizumi is also a fan of Finnish composer Jean Sibelius. On 8 September 2006, he and Finnish Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen visited the Sibelius' home, where Koizumi showed respect to the late composer with a moment of silence. He owns reproductions of the manuscripts of all seven symphonies by Sibelius.[48][49]

In 2009, Koizumi made a voice acting appearance in an Ultra Series feature film, Mega Monster Battle: Ultra Galaxy Legend The Movie, playing the voice of Ultraman King. Koizumi said he took on the role at the urging of his son Shinjiro.[50] His political career is parodied in a seinen manga, Mudazumo Naki Kaikaku, which re-interprets his life as a mahjong master.[citation needed]

He has been compared many times to American actor Richard Gere, because of their similar hair style.[51] In 2005, he used the latter as a boost for his falling popularity, by staging an "impromptu ballroom dance performance".[52]

Koizumi cabinets

[edit]
First
(26 April 2001)
First, Realigned
(30 September 2002)
Second
(19 November 2003)
Second, Realigned
(22 September 2004)
Third, Realigned
(31 October 2005)
Secretary Yasuo Fukuda 4 Hiroyuki Hosoda Shinzō Abe
Internal Affairs Toranosuke Katayama Taro Aso Heizō Takenaka 3
Justice Mayumi Moriyama Daizō Nozawa Chieko Nohno Seiken Sugiura
Foreign Affairs Makiko Tanaka 1 Yoriko Kawaguchi Nobutaka Machimura Taro Aso
Finance Masajuro Shiokawa Sadakazu Tanigaki
Education Fumio Kishida Takeo Kawamura Nariaki Nakayama Kenji Kosaka
Health Chikara Sakaguchi Hidehisa Otsuji Jirō Kawasaki
Agriculture Tsutomu Takebe Tadamori Oshima 2 Yoshiyuki Kamei Yoshinobu Shimamura Shoichi Nakagawa
Economy Takeo Hiranuma Shōichi Nakagawa Toshihiro Nikai
Land Chikage Oogi Nobuteru Ishihara Kazuo Kitagawa
Environment Hiroshi Oki 1 Shunichi Suzuki Yuriko Koike
Public Safety Jin Murai Sadakazu Tanigaki Kiyoko Ono Yoshitaka Murata Tetsuo Kutsukake
Disaster Prevention Yoshitada Konoike Kiichi Inoue
Defense Gen Nakatani Shigeru Ishiba Yoshinori Ohno Fukushiro Nukaga
Economic Policy Heizō Takenaka 3 Heizō Takenaka Heizō Takenaka Kaoru Yosano
Financial Affairs Hakuo Yanagisawa Tatsuya Ito
Admin. and Reg. Reform Nobuteru Ishihara Kazuyoshi Kaneko Seiichiro Murakami Kōki Chūma
Technology Koji Omi Hiroyuki Hosoda Toshimitsu Motegi Yasufumi Tanahashi Iwao Matsuda
Youth and Gender Kuniko Inoguchi

Notes:

  1. Makiko Tanaka was fired on 29 January 2002. Koizumi served as interim foreign minister until 1 February, when he appointed then-environment minister Yoriko Kawaguchi to the post. Koizumi appointed Hiroshi Oki to replace Kawaguchi.
  2. Oshima resigned on 31 March 2003, due to a farm-subsidy scandal. He was replaced by Kamei, who was kept in the next reshuffle.
  3. Takenaka has also held the portfolio of Minister of State for Postal Privatization since the first Koizumi cabinet. He is the only person to serve on Koizumi's cabinet through all five reshuffles.
  4. Fukuda resigned on 7 May 2004, and was replaced by Hosoda.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Koizumi". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  2. ^ "Koizumi". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  3. ^ "Koizumi". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  4. ^ a b "Koizumi to exit political stage", The Japan Times, 26 September 2008.
  5. ^ a b c Nishiyama, George (2 October 2013). "Fukushima Watch: Popular Ex-PM Koizumi Comes Out Against Nukes". Wall Street Journal Japan Real Time. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  6. ^ "Ohashi's anti-Koizumi campaign goes on without policies". Kyodo News. 17 July 2001. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  7. ^ "「細川・小泉」あるか2度目の連携". 日本経済新聞. 9 January 2014. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  8. ^ a b c Anderson, Gregory E., "Lionheart or Paper Tiger? A First-term Koizumi Retrospective" at the Wayback Machine (archived 19 February 2006) (Archive), Asian Perspective 28:149–182, March 2004.
  9. ^ Hiroshi Kaihara, "Japan’s political economy and Koizumi’s structural reform: A rise and fall of neoclassical economic reform in Japan." East Asia 25.4 (2008): 389–405.
  10. ^ a b Kaihara, "Japan’s political economy and Koizumi’s structural reform" (2008): 389–405.
  11. ^ Petter Y. Lindgren (2023). "Explaining important public contests in Japan: Rhetorical strategies, causality, and populism". Contemporary Japan: 1–27. doi:10.1080/18692729.2023.2247278.
  12. ^ Chen, Edwin (1 July 2001). "Bush Enjoys a Warm Meeting With Koizumi". Los Angeles Times.
  13. ^ "Junichiro Koizumi: 'I'm not strange. I'm extraordinary'". Financial Times. 10 August 2018. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  14. ^ "内閣府ウェブサイトの常時暗号化による「https:」への切り替え – 内閣府" (PDF). wwwa.cao.go.jp. Archived from the original on 11 July 2007.
  15. ^ a b "Diet closes for summer, puts lid on Koizumi legacy Archived June 6, 2011, at the Wayback Machine," Japan Times (registration required), 17 June 2006.
  16. ^ "Lawmakers visit Japanese Embassy to protest Koizumi's planned Seoul trip," The Korea Herald, 12 October 2001.
  17. ^ "Koizumi not backing down on Yasukuni," The Japan Times (registration required), 26 January 2006.
  18. ^ "Koizumi shrine visit stokes anger". BBC News. 15 August 2006. Retrieved 3 April 2010.
  19. ^ "Yahoo news". Archived from the original on 2 June 2010.
  20. ^ "Koizumi, Former Japan Premier, to Quit Parliament After Aso Win – Bloomberg". Bloomberg News. 22 October 2012. Archived from the original on 22 October 2012. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
  21. ^ "Koizumi apologizes for war wounds". CNN. 31 August 2005. Archived from the original on 18 December 2005.
  22. ^ Koizumi's popularity hits fresh peak, CNN, 12 June 2001. Archived 4 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ "Japanese Cabinet plays politics with crying game". Associated Press. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  24. ^ "Koizumi ally quits politics over scandal," BBC News, 8 April 2002.
  25. ^ "New Komeito exec signals willingness to jump LDP ship," The Japan Times(registration required), 28 July 2005.
  26. ^ Sachiko Sakamaki and Takahiko Hyuga, "Koizumi, Former Japan Premier, to Quit Parliament After Aso Win", Bloomberg, 26 September 2008.
  27. ^ a b c Okubo, Maki (12 January 2014). "'We've been lied to,' said ex-Prime Minister Koizumi". The Asahi Shimbun. Archived from the original on 13 January 2014. Retrieved 13 January 2014.
  28. ^ Nishiyama, George (16 October 2013). "Fukushima Watch: Former PM Koizumi Picks Up Anti-Nuclear Torch". Wall Street Journal Japan Real Time. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  29. ^ "Koizumi hits back at criticism of sudden no-nuclear stance". The Asahi Shimbun. 4 November 2013. Archived from the original on 9 January 2014. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  30. ^ "Ex-Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi urges zero nuclear power". UPI. 13 November 2013. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  31. ^ "細川元首相が出馬か? 東京都知事選 見えてきた戦いの構図". Daily Noborder. 5 January 2014. Archived from the original on 4 January 2014. Retrieved 8 January 2014. 1月4日、『週刊ポスト』と『日刊ゲンダイ』がビッグネームの出馬の可能性を伝えたのだ。それは、元首相の細川護煕氏を、元首相の小泉純一郎氏が推すという驚愕の構図だ。
  32. ^ "細川元首相、都知事選候補に浮上 「脱原発」争点に". 朝日新聞. 9 January 2014. Retrieved 9 January 2014. 立候補した際には「脱原発」を最大の争点にする意向だ。このため、同じく「脱原発」を掲げる小泉氏との連携を重視。小泉氏からの支援を受けられるかどうか慎重に見極めている。
  33. ^ "Koizumi, Hosokawa to set up anti-nuclear forum". Kyodo News. 15 April 2014. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  34. ^ Steele, Jeanette (17 May 2016). "Japan's former PM backs sick U.S. sailors". San Diego Union-Tribune. Archived from the original on 19 May 2016. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
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Further reading

[edit]
  • Envall, Hans David Persson. "Exceptions that make the rule? Koizumi Jun'ichirō and political leadership in Japan." Japanese Studies 28.2 (2008): 227–242 online.
  • Hoover, William D. Historical dictionary of postwar Japan (2011).
  • Kaihara, Hiroshi. "Japan’s political economy and Koizumi’s structural reform: A rise and fall of neoclassical economic reform in Japan." East Asia 25.4 (2008): 389–405.
  • Köllner, Patrick. "The liberal democratic party at 50: sources of dominance and changes in the Koizumi era." Social Science Japan Journal (2006) 9#2 pp 243–257 online
  • Lee, Jeong Yeon. "Getting Japan Back on the Sustainable Growth Path: Lessons from the Koizumi Era." Asian Perspective (2015): 513–540. online
  • Mishima, Ko. "Grading Japanese Prime Minister Koizumi’s revolution: how far has the LDP’s Policymaking changed?." Critical Readings on the Liberal Democratic Party in Japan (Brill, 2018) pp. 1557–1578.
  • Mulgan, Aurelia George. Japan's Failed Revolution: Koizumi and the Politics of Economic Reform (2013) excerpt
  • Otake, Hideo, Kosuke Mizuno, and Pasuk Phongpaichit, "Neoliberal populism in Japanese politics: A study of Prime Minister Koizumi in comparison with President Reagan." Populism in Asia (2009): 202–216.
  • Pohlkamp, Elli-Katharina. "Public Opinion and Japanese Foreign Policy Decision-Making Processes During the Koizumi Administration" (PhD Diss. Universitätsbibliothek Tübingen, 2014) online in English.
  • Stockwin, J. A. A. "From Koizumi to Abe: Same Bed, Different Dreams?." Japanese Studies 27.3 (2007): 223–230.
  • Uchiyama, Yu. Koizumi and Japanese politics: Reform strategies and leadership style (Routledge, 2010).
  • "Reform in the Rising Sun: Koizumi’s Bid to Revise Japan’s Pacifist Constitution" (Archive). North Carolina Journal of International Law and Commercial Regulation Vol. 32, p. 335–390.
[edit]
Party political offices
Preceded by President of the Liberal Democratic Party
2001–2006
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by
Takao Fujimoto
Minister of Health and Welfare
1988–1989
Succeeded by
Saburo Toida
Preceded by Minister of Posts and Telecommunications
1992–1993
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Health and Welfare
1996–1998
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Japan
2001–2006
Succeeded by