List of political parties in Japan
There are thousands of political parties in Japan. Any organization that supports any 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 the National Diet, either in the House of Representatives and/or in the House of Councillors.
Parties currently represented in the national Diet
Legal status as political party is tied to having five members in the Diet or at least two percent nationally of either proportional or local vote in the last Representatives or one of the last two Councillors elections. Political parties receive public party funding, are allowed to concurrently nominate candidates for 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.Parties currently represented in prefectural and municipal assemblies (incomplete)
Note: In legal terms, all of the parties below are "political organizations", not "political parties".- New Socialist Party, a left breakaway group from the Japanese Socialist Party, created in 1996 when the latter formed the Social Democratic Party; the New Socialist Party was represented in the national Diet from 1996 to 1998
- Greens Japan, created in 2012 as successor of Greens Japan, a green party formed by the merger of the conservative-green Greens Japan and the left-wing-green Rainbow and Greens in 2008
- Several member organizations of the Japan People's Political Network, a federation of local consumer movements that entered politics in the 1970s
Prefectural and local parties
- Chiiki Seitō Iwate of former Social Democrats and independents
- Kyoto Party
- Osaka Restoration Association, the dominant party in Ōsaka prefecture formed by former governor Tōru Hashimoto who wants to dissolve Ōsaka city and Sakai city and turn them into Special wards of Ōsaka. Affiliated with the Osaka Ishin no Kai that was formed in October 2015.
- Tokyoites First Party
- Party of Hope
- Okinawa Social Mass Party, formerly the Okinawa Socialist Mass Party.
- Political Group of Okinawa Revolution, Okinawa regionalist party formed by LDP defectors in 2005, represented in the national Diet from 2005 to 2008, merged with the PNP Okinawa prefectural federation in 2012, keeping its name
- Green Niigata, Midori Niigata
- * formerly Niigata New Party for People, Shimin Shin-tō Niigata
- Kariyushi Club Kariyushi Kurabu
Other minor parties
Existing national parties represented in the Diet in the past
Current political parties that used to be in the Diet but are not currently represented:- Rikken Yōseikai
- Dainiin Club Dainiin Kurabu
- New Party for Salaried Men Sararīman Shintō
- Takeru
- Happiness Realization Party
Other parties
- Japan Revolutionary Communist League
- Japan Revolutionary Communist League, National Committee
- Japan Revolutionary Communist League
- National Socialist Japanese Workers' Party
- Japan Nation Party
- Women's Party, feminist party that regularly contests House of Councillors proportional elections
- Ishin Seitō Shimpū
- Happiness Realization Party
- Tokyo Tea Party
- Ainu Party, party representing the rights of the Ainu people.
- Japan First Party
Defunct parties
Former major parties
- Liberal Party : initially Constitutional Liberal Party, the strongest party in the early House of Representatives and the mainstream liberal opposition to government military spending and foreign policy
- Progressive Party : created during a temporary alliance between Liberals and the oligarchy
- Constitutional Party : formed by a merger of Liberal and Progressive Party
- True Constitutional Party : breakaway of liberals discontented with the alliance with the government
- Rikken Seiyūkai: formed in 1900 by a now permanent alliance between parts of the Meiji oligarchy, the bureaucracy and members of the liberal parties it became the dominant force in party politics throughout the Empire
- Constitutional People's Party
- Rikken Dōshikai, another attempt by Katsura Tarō to form a strong opposition to the Seiyūkai
- Constitutional Assembly
- True Seiyū Party : a Seiyūkai breakaway during the "three constitutional factions" alliance between Seiyūkai, Kenseikai and Kakushin Club
- Constitutional Democratic Party
- Imperial Rule Assistance Association
- Japanese Liberal Party
- Japanese Progressive Party : conservative party around former Minseitō politicians
- Japanese Socialist Party, a small minority before the war, the Socialists became the main opposition to the soon united conservatives, but continually lost ground to more centrist opposition parties over the decades
- Summer breeze assembly, created as the largest parliamentary group in the first House of Councillors by conservatives and some liberals and moderate socialists including a number of former House of Peers members, it had a centrist approach and was willing to work with centre-left and centre-right cabinets
- Democratic Party : created by the Progressive Party and a Liberal breakaway group, the party tried to occupy the "centre" between Liberals and Socialists, but was soon divided over cooperation with either group
- Democratic Liberal Party
- Liberal Party : created after the Democrats had finally split over cooperation with the Liberal government, but soon divided itself into followers of first JLP president Hatoyama Ichirō who returned to politics when the SCAP purge was lifted and the "Yoshida school" of his successor Yoshida Shigeru. forefather of Liberal Democratic Party
- Japanese Democratic Party : Hatoyama-led breakaway from the liberals merged with smaller groups including the opposition remnants of the Democratic Party; the "conservative merger" of 1955 united Liberal Party and Japanese Democratic Party in the Liberal Democratic Party that dominated postwar politics for decades. Forefather of Liberal Democratic Party.
- New Frontier Party, formed after an anti-LDP government had collapsed to create a unified opposition party ranging from socialists to conservatives
- Democratic Party of Japan : the DPJ was founded in 1998 as a result of the merger of several anti-LDP opposition parties, and was the ruling party in 2009-2012. Its membership covered a broad spectrum of political beliefs, but it was generally considered a centrist party.
- Japan Restoration Party : the JRP was founded by Tōru Hashimoto the Governor of Osaka Prefectire in 2012 as a result of the merger of several right-wing regional parties, and was the third biggest political block in the National Diet.
- Japan Innovation Party : formed by a merger of the right-wing JRP and centre-right Unity Party, the Osaka regional group split off the JIP as Initiatives from Osaka in 2015 and the centre-right JIP later merged with the DPJ.
- Democratic Party : formed by a merger of the remainder of JIP and the DPJ, the party splinter during the 2017 general election among four groups: the centre-left CDP, the centre-right Kibō no Tō, group of centre align independent block, and the a centre align block remain with the DP. After the election the more left-leaning centre group join the CDP or remain as independent, while the right-leaning centre group merged with the Kibō no Tō to established the DPP.
Others
Pre- and early constitutional era
- Freedom and People's Rights Movement and liberal parties in the early House of Representatives
- * Public Party of Patriots
- * Self-help Society
- * Patriot Society
- * Liberal Party
- * Constitutional Progressive Party, merged with other groups to form the Progressive Party
- * Daidō Club
- * Liberal Party, merged with other groups to form the Rikken Jiyūtō
- * Oriental Liberal Party, asianist, radical liberal
- Opponents and "moderate faction" in the early House of Representatives
- * Constitutional Imperial Rule Party
- * Great Achievement Association
- * People's Liberal Party
- * Central Negotiations Assembly
- * People's Association
- * Great Japanese Association
- * Independent Club
- * Same-minded Club
Empire of Japan until 1940
- Imperial Party
- Daidō Club
- Yūkōkai
- Centre Club
- Impartial Association, also Upright Party
- Reform Club
- Impartial Club
- Shinsei Club
- Reform Party
- Kokumin Dōshikai
- People's Union
- Shōwakai
- Tōhōkai
Socialist and labour movement
- Social Democratic Party
- Japan Socialist Party
- Japanese Commoners Party
- Farmers and Workers Party
- Workers and Farmers Party
- Japanese Workers and Farmers Party
- Japan Farmers Party
- Social People Party
- Workers and Farmers Party
- Japanese Masses Party
- Workers and Farmers Party
- National Masses Party
- National Workers and Farmers Mass Party
- Socialist Masses Party
Postwar Japan
Note: Postwar parties often give themselves "English" names which sometimes differ significantly from translations of their Japanese names.LDP precursor and breakaway parties
- Japanese Cooperative Party,
- Cooperative Democratic Party,
- National Party,
- National Cooperative Party, merger of Cooperative Democratic Party and People's Party,
- Japan Farmers' Party
- Farmers' Cooperative Party
- People's Democratic Party
- New Political Club
- Japanese Reconstruction League
- Progressive Party
- Japanese Liberal Party, generally referred to as Secessionist Liberal Party or Hatoyama Liberal Party, a first breakaway of Ichirō Hatoyama and his followers from the Liberal Party, a majority including Hatoyama returned to the Liberal Party later that year
- Japanese Liberal Party
- New Liberal Club, breakaway of LDP Diet members predominantly from urban constituencies, in a joint parliamentary group with the Social Democratic Federation in the early 1980s, then part of a coalition government with the LDP under Yasuhiro Nakasone, most returned to the LDP in 1986
- Tax Party, party of former New Liberal Club member Chinpei Nozue
- Progressive Party
- New Party Harbinger
- New Future Party, breakaway of five Mitsuzuka faction Representatives, joined the New Frontier Party
- Japan Renewal Party
- Kōshikai, breakaway of LDP Diet members opposed to the Grand Coalition with the JSP, joined the New Frontier Party
- Sakigake Party
- Japan Greens Atsuo Nakamura
- Japan Greens
- People's New Party
- Sunrise Party, formed in November 2012 by Takeo Hiranuma's Sunrise Party of Japan and Shintarō Ishihara who resigned as governor of Tokyo to return to national politics, merged into Japan Restoration Party in November 2012
JSP breakaway parties
- Socialist Reform Party
- Workers and Farmers Party
- Social Democratic Party, renamed
- Cooperative Party, joined the right-wing Socialists
- Democratic Socialist Party
- Socialist Citizens' Federation
- Socialist Club
- Social Democratic Federation
- New Party 'Liberals for Protecting the Constitution' and Kenpō Midori-nō no Rentai, Den joined the Sangiin Forum
- Citizens' League
Other NFP and DPJ precursor and breakaway parties
- Rengō no Kai formed as political arm of the newly formed RENGO trade union federation, helped win an opposition majority in the House of Councillors in 1989, renamed
- Japan New Party
- Democratic Reform Party
- New Kōmei Party, one of two groups resulting from the dissolution of Kōmeitō
- Sun Party
- Democratic Party of Japan , formed by Naoto Kan Yukio Hatoyama and of New Party Harbinger, then part of the Grand Coalition with LDP and SDP, together with SDP and NFP politicians; after the dissolution of the NFP most successor parties joined the DPJ parliamentary group and merged a few months later to form the "new" Democratic Party
- From Five, NFP breakaway around Morihiro Hosokawa, joined Minseitō
- New Fraternity Party, NFP successor around Kansei Nakano
- Liberal Party , party of Ichirō Ozawa followers after the New Frontier Party had dissolved, joined the LDP in a coalition government from 1999 to 2000
- Good Governance Party, merger of three member parties of the DPJ parliamentary group
- Voice of the People, NFP successor around Michihiko Kano, joined Minseitō
- Reform Club
- New Peace Party, NFP successor of former Kōmeitō Representatives, reestablished Kōmeitō
- Dawn Club, NFP successor of former Kōmeitō Councillors, merged with Kōmei and reestablished Kōmeitō
- Conservative Party , breakaway group from the Liberal Party wanting to continue the coalition with the LDP and Kōmeitō
- New Conservative Party, merger of parts of the Conservative Party with a breakaway group from the Democratic Party, joined the LDP
- Japan Renaissance Party by Democratic and independent Councillors ready to cooperate with the LDP-Kōmeitō government, formed New Renaissance Party
- New Renaissance Party
- Kizuna Party, founded in December 2011 by former Ozawa Democrats, opposed to VAT hike, opposed to joining TPP, merged into People's Life First in 2012
- People's Life First, founded by Ichirō Ozawa and other DPJ Diet members opposing a planned sales tax increase in Summer 2012, merged into TPJ in November 2012
Others
- Japanese Women's Party, short-lived party of feminist leader Misako Enoki
- Welfare Party, party of Representative Eita Yashiro who joined the LDP in 1984, the party never won a seat in the Diet again and eventually dissolved
- Sports and Peace Party
- Truth Party, party of Ōmu Shinrikyō founder Shōkō Asahara, its 25 candidates in the 1990 House of Representatives election altogether but a few thousand votes
- Kōmei
- Liberal League
- House of Councillors Forum
- Rainbow and Greens
- * formerly House of Councillors Club
- Independents
- The Spirit of Japan Party, formed by prefectural and municipal politicians in 2010, dissolved to join Japan Restoration Party in 2012
- Genzei Nippon, party founded by Nagoya mayor Takashi Kawamura in 2010, mainly active in Nagoya municipal and Aichi prefectural politics, won some seats in other areas in the 2011 local elections, had its first National Diet member in 2011, achieved party status in 2012, decided to merge into Datsu-Genpatsu in November 2012
- Tax Cuts Japan, founded in a merger of Genzei Nippon and Han-TPP in November 2012, merged into TPJ in November 2012
- "Anti-TPP, Nuclear Phaseout, Consumption Tax Hike Freeze Realization Party", founded by Masahiko Yamada and Shizuka Kamei in November 2012 following their respective departures from the DPJ and the PNP, merged with Genzei Nippon in November 2012.
- Tomorrow Party of Japan Nippon Mirai no Tō, short-lived anti-nuclear party formed by a merger between Ichirō Ozawa's People's Life First and the Datsu-Genpatsu party, itself a merger of Masahiko Yamada's Han-TPP and Takashi Kawamura's Genzei Nippon, and the Representatives who had joined Green Wind. Lost all of its seats and dissolved into Green Wind in 2013.
- Green Wind - Another short-lived anti-nuclear party. Dissolved in 2013.
- Party for Japanese Kokoro - Originally established as the 'Party for Future Generations' in 2014, lead by Shintaro Ishihara. Split from the Japan Restoration Party, its last member was transferred to the LDP in 2018 and the party was dissolved.
- Internet Breakthrough Party of Japan
Political parties in U.S. Okinawa
- Okinawa People's Party, joined the Japanese Communist Party after the return to the mainland
- Okinawa Social Mass Party, after the return to the mainland, a merger with the Japanese Socialist Party was planned, its only Representative joined the DSP, but the party continues to exist as a regional party
- Ryukyu Democratic Party
- Okinawa Liberal Democratic Party , split over the "Caraway whirlwind" of High Commissioner Lt. Gen. Paul W. Caraway
- Democratic Party, renamed
- Okinawa Liberal Democratic Party , became the prefectural federation of the mainland Liberal Democratic Party