Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/New_Party_Daichi> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 99 of
99
with 100 triples per page.
- New_Party_Daichi abstract "New Party Daichi (新党大地 Shintō Daichi) is a political party formed on August 18, 2005. It is mostly active in Hokkaidō, Japan's northernmost and largest prefecture. The party is headed by former Liberal Democratic Party member Muneo Suzuki. Suzuki resigned from the LDP in June 2002 after being arrested on suspicion of accepting bribes. He was convicted of bribery and other charges the next year, and announced the party's creation while released on bail. He was critical of Junichiro Koizumi's policies and postal privatization. As of 2014, the party's only Diet member is Suzuki's daughter Takako Suzuki in the House of Representatives (Hokkaidō proportional) who does not sit with any lower house caucus.Shinto Daichi is categorized as a political organization (seiji dantai) because it does not fulfill the criteria necessary to be recognized as a political party (seitō) under laws regulating party funding and elections.In 2005, the party fielded one candidate from a single-seat district while Suzuki headed a roster of three candidates for the proportional representation constituency. In the 2005 and 2009 general elections of the lower house, Muneo Suzuki was elected to a proportional seat in the Hokkaidō bloc. In 2010, when the Supreme Court ultimately confirmed his conviction, Suzuki had to give up his seat to serve his prison term. He was replaced in the House of Representatives by proportional runner-up Takahiro Asano, but remained party leader. In the 2007 regular election of the upper house, the party endorsed independent Ainu activist Kaori Tahara in Hokkaido (two-member district) who lost to the two major party candidates. New Party Daichi did not contest the 2010 upper house election. In 2013, it fielded two prefectural (Hokkaido & Osaka) and nine proportional candidates, but failed to win a seat (14.7% of votes/rank 3 for Takahiro Asano in two-member Hokkaido, 1.5%/rank 7 for Mika Yoshiba in four-member Osaka, 1.0%/no seat for New Party Daichi in the 48-member proportional election).In late December 2011, Suzuki was joined by five Diet members (see below), and the party was renamed New Party Daichi—Shinminshu (新党大地・真民主, Shintō Daichi – Shinminshu, \"New Party Daichi – True Democrats\") As the party now had five members in the Diet and was founded before January 1, 2012 it was formally recognized as political party in the legal sense in 2012 and became eligible to receive public party funding and other benefits such as nominating dual candidates in lower house elections who run simultaneously in a single-member district and the proportional segment and who may optionally be placed on the same list rank – as New Party Daichi did in the 2012 lower house election when seven candidates from the party ran in Hokkaido districts who simultaneously were candidates on the party list in the Hokkaido proportional block; in the rest of the country, the party endorsed most district candidates from Ichirō Ozawa's DPJ-breakaway TPJ, and did not compete in the proportional races. In Hokkaido, Daichi candidates – in turn endorsed by the TPJ – all lost their district races (including two incumbents), but the party won one proportional seat. Tomohiro Ishikawa ranked top and took the seat; in 2013, he resigned and was replaced by proportional list runner-up Takako Suzuki.Members of New Party Daichi – True Democrats were: Takahiro Asano (Rep. – Hokkaidō proportional, formerly New Party Daichi) Kenkō Matsuki (Rep. – Hokkaidō 12, formerly DPJ (Ozawa group), expelled from the party after his no-confidence vote against Naoto Kan) Tomohiro Ishikawa (Rep. – Hokkaidō 11, formerly DPJ (Ozawa group), had to leave the party as Ozawa's ex-secretary during the investigations against Ozawa) Yoshirō Yokomine (Coun. – national proportional, formerly DPJ) Makoto Hirayama (Coun. – national proportional, formerly New Party Nippon, then an independent member of the DPJ caucus)Unlike the Kizuna party, New Party Daichi – True Democrats initially wanted to remain with the coalition majority in the Diet. For a few weeks, their members even remained with the DPJ caucus in the House of Councillors, but formed a separate caucus in February 2012 and eventually sided with the opposition to the DPJ-led coalition later in 2012.The party reverted to its original name on November 28, 2012.".
- New_Party_Daichi formationDate "2005-08-18".
- New_Party_Daichi formationYear "2005".
- New_Party_Daichi ideology Conservatism.
- New_Party_Daichi ideology Regionalism_(politics).
- New_Party_Daichi leader Muneo_Suzuki.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageExternalLink www.daichi.gr.jp.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageID "2769053".
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageLength "7185".
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageOutDegree "39".
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageRevisionID "695343601".
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Category:2005_establishments_in_Japan.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Conservative_parties_in_Japan.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Political_parties_established_in_2005.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Politics_of_Hokkaido.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Regional_parties_in_Japan.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Conservatism.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink File:Shintou_logo.png.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Hokkaido.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Hokkaido_proportional_representation_block.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Hokkaidō_11th_district.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Hokkaidō_12th_district.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink House_of_Councillors_(Japan).
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink House_of_Representatives_(Japan).
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_House_of_Councillors_election,_2007.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_House_of_Councillors_election,_2010.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_House_of_Councillors_election,_2013.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_general_election,_2005.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_general_election,_2009.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_general_election,_2012.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Junichirō_Koizumi.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Kaori_Tahara.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Kenko_Matsuki.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Liberal_Democratic_Party_(Japan).
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Makoto_Hirayama.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Muneo_Suzuki.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Municipalities_of_Japan.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink New_Party_Nippon.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Regionalism_(politics).
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Sekihairitsu.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Takahiro_Asano.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Takako_Suzuki.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Tomohiro_Ishikawa.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Tomorrow_Party_of_Japan.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLink Yoshiro_Yokomine.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLinkText "NPD".
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLinkText "NPN".
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageWikiLinkText "New Party Daichi".
- New_Party_Daichi country "Japan".
- New_Party_Daichi foundation "2005-08-18".
- New_Party_Daichi ideology Conservatism.
- New_Party_Daichi ideology Regionalism_(politics).
- New_Party_Daichi leader Muneo_Suzuki.
- New_Party_Daichi partyLogo File:Shintou_logo.png.
- New_Party_Daichi partyName "New Party Daichi 新党大地".
- New_Party_Daichi seats1Title House_of_Representatives_(Japan).
- New_Party_Daichi seats2Title House_of_Councillors_(Japan).
- New_Party_Daichi seats3Title Hokkaido.
- New_Party_Daichi seats4Title "Municipal assembly members in Hokkaidō".
- New_Party_Daichi website www.daichi.gr.jp.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Composition_bar.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_Political_party.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Japan_political_parties.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageUsesTemplate color.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nihongo.
- New_Party_Daichi wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- New_Party_Daichi subject Category:2005_establishments_in_Japan.
- New_Party_Daichi subject Category:Conservative_parties_in_Japan.
- New_Party_Daichi subject Category:Political_parties_established_in_2005.
- New_Party_Daichi subject Category:Politics_of_Hokkaido.
- New_Party_Daichi subject Category:Regional_parties_in_Japan.
- New_Party_Daichi hypernym Party.
- New_Party_Daichi type Agent.
- New_Party_Daichi type Organisation.
- New_Party_Daichi type PoliticalParty.
- New_Party_Daichi type Establishment.
- New_Party_Daichi type Organization.
- New_Party_Daichi type Redirect.
- New_Party_Daichi type Organization.
- New_Party_Daichi type Organization.
- New_Party_Daichi type Agent.
- New_Party_Daichi type SocialPerson.
- New_Party_Daichi type Thing.
- New_Party_Daichi type Q43229.
- New_Party_Daichi type Q7278.
- New_Party_Daichi comment "New Party Daichi (新党大地 Shintō Daichi) is a political party formed on August 18, 2005. It is mostly active in Hokkaidō, Japan's northernmost and largest prefecture. The party is headed by former Liberal Democratic Party member Muneo Suzuki. Suzuki resigned from the LDP in June 2002 after being arrested on suspicion of accepting bribes. He was convicted of bribery and other charges the next year, and announced the party's creation while released on bail.".
- New_Party_Daichi label "New Party Daichi".
- New_Party_Daichi sameAs Q1247614.
- New_Party_Daichi sameAs Neue_Partei_Daichi.
- New_Party_Daichi sameAs Nuevo_Partido_Daichi.
- New_Party_Daichi sameAs Nouveau_parti_Daichi.
- New_Party_Daichi sameAs xd7x9exd7xa4xd7x9cxd7x92xd7xaa_xd7x93xd7x90xd7x99xd7xa6xd7x99_xd7x94xd7x97xd7x93xd7xa9xd7x94.
- New_Party_Daichi sameAs 新党大地.
- New_Party_Daichi sameAs 신당대지.
- New_Party_Daichi sameAs m.081kpk.
- New_Party_Daichi sameAs Q1247614.
- New_Party_Daichi wasDerivedFrom New_Party_Daichi?oldid=695343601.
- New_Party_Daichi homepage www.daichi.gr.jp.
- New_Party_Daichi isPrimaryTopicOf New_Party_Daichi.