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Japan Farmers Party (1947–1949)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Japan Farmers Party
日本農民党
Founded25 February 1947
Dissolved1949
Succeeded byNew Farmers Party
HeadquartersTokyo, Japan
IdeologyAgrarianism
Land reform
Political positionCenter

The Japan Farmers Party (Japanese: 日本農民党, Nihon Nōmintō) was a political party in Japan.

History

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The party was established by Katsutarō Kita and four independent members of the House of Representatives on 25 February 1947. Kita had previously formed the Japan Cooperative Party in August 1946.[1][2] However, three of them, including Kita, were removed from the House of Representatives shortly afterwards as part of the post-war purge.[2]

In the 1947 general elections the party won four seats, and a further four representatives joined the party after the elections.[2] After talks about a merger with the National Cooperative Party failed due to the opposition of Nakano Shirō, the chairman of the party's central committee, the party considered renaming itself the New Farmers Party.[2]

The 1949 general elections saw the party reduced to a single seat and it was disbanded thereafter, and effectively replaced by the New Farmers Party.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Haruhiro Fukui (1985) Political parties of Asia and the Pacific, Greenwood Press, p514
  2. ^ a b c d e Fukui, p516