Kyoko Nakayama
Kyoko Nakayama (中山 恭子 Nakayama Kyōko?, born January 26, 1940) is a Japanese politician and leader of the Party for Japanese Kokoro. She used to be a member of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), Sunrise Party of Japan and Japan Restoration Party and is serving her second term as a member of the House of Councillors (Upper House) in the Diet (national legislature). She was Special Advisor to the Prime Minister (naikaku sōri-daijin hosakan) for the North Korean abduction issue under Junichiro Koizumi, beginning in 2002. She left the post in 2004 but was reappointed by Shinzō Abe in 2006. She was appointed by Yasuo Fukuda as State Minister in charge of the Population and Gender Equality Issues on August 1, 2008.[1][2]
A graduate of the University of Tokyo (with a major in French literature), she worked at the Ministry of Finance from 1966 until 2002 and was elected to the House of Councillors for the first time in 2007, and again in 2013.[3] During her campaign, she pledged to resolve the abduction issue. Her husband, Nariaki Nakayama, is a former transport minister and was also a diet member.[4]
She and her husband left the LDP and joined the Sunrise Party of Japan on June 21, 2010. Along with other members of that party she moved to Shintaro Ishihara's short lived Sunrise Party, and with the merger of that party with the Japan Restoration Party she became a member of that party.[5] When Shintaro Ishihara's group left that party to form the Party for Future Generations she and her husband went too. Her husband lost his seat at the 2014 general election, but she remains in the diet.[6] In October 2015 she became leader of the Party for Future Generations and in December of that year led the party in changing its name to the Party for Japanese Kokoro.
Notes
- ↑ "Fukuda overhauls Cabinet / LDP executive shakeup also elevates Aso to party No. 2", The Yomiuri Shimbun, August 2, 2008.
- ↑ The Japan Times, "Fukuda's new lineup", August 3, 2008.
- ↑ House of Councillors Ms. Nakayama Kyoko Retrieved March 25, 2015
- ↑ The Japan Times, "Fukuda's new lineup", August 3, 2008.
- ↑ Asahi Shimbun website Interpretations of Japan's wartime history causing rift in ruling LDP May 14, 2013
- ↑ Party for Future Generations Officer List Retrieved March 25, 2015
References
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External links
- Cabinet Profile
- Official website in Japanese.
- Headquarters for the Abduction Issue, Government of Japan
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- Living people
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