Akashian general election, 1986: Difference between revisions
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A '''general election''' was held in [[Akashi]] on 28 June 1986. The [[Ran Tsukuda]] government was re-elected in a landslide, with the {{A-CNP}} coming one seat short of a majority alone. The scale of the victory led to the election being nicknamed the "blue wave" ({{wpl|Japanese language|Miranian}}: 青い波 ''aoi nami''). | A '''general election''' was held in [[Akashi]] on 28 June 1986. The [[Ran Tsukuda]] government was re-elected in a landslide, with the {{A-CNP}} coming one seat short of a majority alone. The scale of the victory led to the election being nicknamed the "blue wave" ({{wpl|Japanese language|Miranian}}: 青い波 ''aoi nami''). | ||
Over the course of her first term, Ran won broad popularity and respect for her consensual governance and negotiating talent. The centre-right coalition she led scored notable successes: [[Economy of Akashi#Contemporary|revitalising the economy]], restoring industrial peace after the turbulence of the [[Economy of Akashi#"Siege economy"|"siege economy"]], and the [[Politics of Akashi#Constitution|Constitution of 1984]]. The elegant, {{wpl|paternalistic conservatism|paternalistic conservative}} image projected by her and her ''sanyoi'' allies proved greatly appealing to the public during the ''[[neondai]]''. | Over the course of her first term, Ran won broad popularity and respect for her consensual governance and negotiating talent. The centre-right coalition she led scored notable successes: [[Economy of Akashi#Contemporary|revitalising the economy]], restoring industrial peace after the turbulence of the [[Economy of Akashi#"Siege economy"|"siege economy"]], and the [[Politics of Akashi#Constitution|Constitution of 1984]]. The elegant, {{wpl|paternalistic conservatism|paternalistic conservative}} image projected by her and [[red rice group|her ''sanyoi'' allies]] proved greatly appealing to the public during the ''[[neondai]]''. | ||
The government was further advantaged by disunity among the opposition. The {{A-SP}} under Kagehisa Uegi's leadership attempted to move to the {{wpl|centrism|centre}}. However, this moderation was unsuccessful, demoralising party supporters and incurring the wrath of the left, particularly the {{A-CP}} and {{A-GP}}. With no prospect of a left-wing government as an alternative, SP supporters approached the election with apathy. | The government was further advantaged by disunity among the opposition. The {{A-SP}} under Kagehisa Uegi's leadership attempted to move to the {{wpl|centrism|centre}}. However, this moderation was unsuccessful, demoralising party supporters and incurring the wrath of the left, particularly the {{A-CP}} and {{A-GP}}. With no prospect of a left-wing government as an alternative, SP supporters approached the election with apathy. | ||
The CNP ran an energetic, "feel-good" campaign, centred around Ran and her ''sanyoi'' colleagues. Policy was de-emphasised, and the party manifesto essentially promised a continuation of existing policies. The tone was summed up in one of Ran's famous campaign speeches: "Things haven't been this good for a long time!" (物事は長い間これほど良くはありませんでした!''Monogoto wa nagaiai kore hodo yoku wa arimasendeshita!''). | The CNP ran an energetic, "feel-good" campaign, centred around Ran and [[red rice group|her ''sanyoi'' colleagues]]. Policy was de-emphasised, and the party manifesto essentially promised a continuation of existing policies. The tone was summed up in one of Ran's famous campaign speeches: "Things haven't been this good for a long time!" (物事は長い間これほど良くはありませんでした!''Monogoto wa nagaiai kore hodo yoku wa arimasendeshita!''). | ||
==Results== | ==Results== |
Latest revision as of 11:58, 26 June 2022
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400 seats in the National Assembly 201 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Turnout | 90,5% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Most voted party by province | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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A general election was held in Akashi on 28 June 1986. The Ran Tsukuda government was re-elected in a landslide, with the Conservative National Party coming one seat short of a majority alone. The scale of the victory led to the election being nicknamed the "blue wave" (Miranian: 青い波 aoi nami).
Over the course of her first term, Ran won broad popularity and respect for her consensual governance and negotiating talent. The centre-right coalition she led scored notable successes: revitalising the economy, restoring industrial peace after the turbulence of the "siege economy", and the Constitution of 1984. The elegant, paternalistic conservative image projected by her and her sanyoi allies proved greatly appealing to the public during the neondai.
The government was further advantaged by disunity among the opposition. The Socialist Party under Kagehisa Uegi's leadership attempted to move to the centre. However, this moderation was unsuccessful, demoralising party supporters and incurring the wrath of the left, particularly the Communist Party and Green Party. With no prospect of a left-wing government as an alternative, SP supporters approached the election with apathy.
The CNP ran an energetic, "feel-good" campaign, centred around Ran and her sanyoi colleagues. Policy was de-emphasised, and the party manifesto essentially promised a continuation of existing policies. The tone was summed up in one of Ran's famous campaign speeches: "Things haven't been this good for a long time!" (物事は長い間これほど良くはありませんでした!Monogoto wa nagaiai kore hodo yoku wa arimasendeshita!).
Results
General election, 28 June 1986 | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Party list | Constituency | Total seats |
+/- | |||||
PR | % | +/− | STV | % | +/− | ||||
Conservative National Party | 2.415.642 | 40,6% | +25,6% | 2.471.919 | 41,5% | +19,6% | 200 | +114 | |
Socialist Party | 624.735 | 10,5% | -1,1% | 595.643 | 10,0% | -2,0% | 41 | -30 | |
National Cooperative Party | 594.986 | 10,0% | +1,0% | 577.774 | 9,7% | -0,5% | 34 | +6 | |
Communist Party | 529.537 | 8,9% | +0,5% | 524.166 | 8,8% | -1,2% | 34 | +2 | |
Green Party | 297.493 | 5,0% | -3,2% | 297.822 | 5,0% | -2,0% | 27 | -4 | |
National Democratic Party | 220.145 | 3,7% | -3,8% | 202.519 | 3,4% | -2,9% | 13 | -12 | |
United Akashi | 208.245 | 3,5% | -3,7% | 190.606 | 3,2% | -2,9% | 13 | -10 | |
Liberal Party | 196.345 | 3,3% | -4,4% | 166.780 | 2,8% | -3,8% | 11 | -16 | |
Reform Party | 190.395 | 3,2% | -3,8% | 178.693 | 3,0% | -3,0% | 11 | -11 | |
National Union | 178.496 | 3,0% | -2,0% | 107.216 | 1,8% | -0,9% | 10 | -7 | |
Justice Party | 148.746 | 2,5% | -0,8% | 83.390 | 1,4% | -0,9% | 1 | -11 | |
Social Credit Party | 142.797 | 2,4% | -0,9% | 119.129 | 2,0% | +0,2% | 0 | -7 | |
Freedom League | 107.097 | 1,8% | -1,4% | 154.867 | 2,6% | +0,5% | 2 | -6 | |
Akashi Renewal Party | 95.198 | 1,6% | -1,4% | 136.998 | 2,3% | +0,3% | 1 | -6 | |
Independents | N/A | 161.153 | 2,5% | -0,3% | 2 | -2 | |||
Total | 5.949.857 | 100% | — | 5.956.432 | 100% | — | 400 | — | |
Registered voters and turnout | 6.574.428 | 90,5% | — | 6.574.428 | 90,6% |
Bloc strength | ||
---|---|---|
Bloc | Parties | Seats |
Crimson bloc | CP, SCP, GP | 61 |
Pale crimson bloc | SP, NU, JP | 52 |
Light yellow bloc | NCP | 34 |
Light blue bloc | LP, NDP, RP, UA, CNP | 248 |
Dark blue bloc | ARP, FL | 3 |
- Government: Conservative National Party minority.
The CNP won a landslide victory. It surpassed 40% in both PR and STV votes, and won 200 seats, one short of a majority alone. This was the closest Akashi had come to single-party government since 1970. The SP turned a minor reduction of 1–2% in its vote into a 30 seat loss, leaving it second with only 41 seats, its worst result since the days of National Union domination.
While the CP's vote held steady and it increased its seat tally by 2, it also suffered a humiliation in being overtaken by the CNP in its stronghold of Kobi. The CNP succeeded in sweeping all provinces.
Analysts noted that the CNP largely obtained its victory by "cannibalising" the vote of its light blue allies: the NDP, LP, RP, and UA all lost 3–4% of their votes and 10–16 seats. Four parties fell beneath the 3% electoral threshold, including the Social Credit Party, which was ejected from the legislature for the first time since 1970.
The light blue bloc won a majority by itself. The leftist infighting was reflected in the crimson bloc winning more seats than the pale crimson bloc. The improved economy and atmosphere of optimism during the neondai devastated the dark blue bloc, which was now reduced to only 3 seats in total.
Due to previous tensions over cabinet allocation, Ran decided to continue with a CNP minority government, with outside support from its light blue allies. Although this worked well for most of her new term, it also provided an opening for the hardline kibi faction to plot her overthrow and join in with the neoliberal conspiracy. Her sudden overthrow through an internal coup on 25 December 1989 brought Ichirō Kondō to the premiership, and caused a new round of political turbulence and public unrest that reached heights unseen since the Summer of Freedom.