Masashi Ishibashi
Masashi Ishibashi | |
---|---|
Chairman of the Japan Socialist Party | |
In office 7 September 1983 – 8 September 1986 | |
Preceded by | Ichio Asukata |
Succeeded by | Takako Doi |
Personal details | |
Born | Yilan City, Taihoku Prefecture, Taiwan | October 6, 1924
Died | December 9, 2019 | (aged 95)
Political party | Japan Socialist Party |
Alma mater | Taiwan College of Commerce |
Masashi Ishibashi (Japanese: 石橋 政嗣 Ishibashi Masashi, October 6, 1924 – December 9, 2019[1]) was a Japanese politician who served as chairman of the Japan Socialist Party from 1983 to 1986.[2][3]
Biography
Early life
Born in
In 1947, he formed a labor union for the "labor service corps" of the
Political career
He began his political life as a member of the
Only a few months preceding the 1983 general elections, Ishibashi assumed the role of chairman for the Japan Socialist Party (JSP). Ishibashi and the JSP cooperated with other opposition parties and moderated their party platform a bit to the right. As a result, the JSP weathered the 1983 elections fairly well and saw its long-running decline in fortunes slow down.[4][5] In 1984, Ishibashi became the first ever serving chairman of the JSP to visit the United States, calling on Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger during Ishibashi's stay in Washington, D.C.[6] Ishibashi also visited North Korea for five days and had talks with Kim Il Sung in late September 1984.[7]
In 1986, under Ishibashi's tenure, the JSP adopted a new program entitled the "New Declaration of the Japan Socialist Party" which saw the party shift in a direction closer to western-style social democratic parties. Unfortunately for Ishibashi, this program did not convince voters that meaningful reform would come from the JSP (as opposed to mavericks within the LDP such as Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone), and as a result the JSP lost 27 seats in the 1986 general elections, and also saw its popular vote fall by 2.26% compared to the previous 1983 election. As is normal in Japanese politics, Ishibashi resigned from his position as chairman following this crushing defeat.
Later life
In later years, he acted as an advisor for JSP chairwoman Takako Doi in strengthening cooperation with centrist parties. Ishibashi's reputation as an inter-party compromiser was seen in the fact that he refused to go along with chairwoman Doi's request that Ishibashi help campaign for an ambitious 180 candidates being fielded by the JSP for the 1990 general election, as this would involve hurting the electoral prospects of centrist allies. The same year as that election, Ishibashi retired from the political world.
After retiring, he turned to
References
- ^ 「非武装中立論」石橋政嗣・元社会党委員長死去 95歳 中曽根元首相らと論戦 ["Non-armed neutral theory" Mr ISHIBASHI Masashi, former Socialist Party chairman died, 95 years old, Controversy with former Prime Minister NAKASONE.] (in Japanese). Mainichi Shimbun. 13 December 2019. Retrieved 2019-12-13.
- Eugene Register-Guard. Associated Press. 11 November 1974. Retrieved 29 December 2010.
- ^ "Ex-Japan Socialist Party Head Masashi Ishibashi Dies at 95". nippon.com. December 13, 2019.
- JSTOR 2644056.
- JSTOR 2644066.
- JSTOR 2644053.
- JSTOR 2644057.