ABSTRACT

This book provides a thorough analysis of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan (LDP), from a variety of perspectives including its factions, party presidential elections, the distribution of posts, national elections, local organisations, the policy making process and partner organisations.

Drawing on comprehensive and up-to-date data, as well as a large number of interviews, internal party documents and quantitative data, The Liberal Democratic Party of Japan explains the machinery of the Japanese government and ruling party, exploring how policies are made. In so doing, the chapters also analyse the strengths and weaknesses of today’s LDP through a comparison of Koizumi Juni’ichirō and Abe Shinzō, both having established long-lasting administrations through their strong leadership.

Demonstrating how the LDP has changed significantly over recent years, particularly since the political reforms of 1994, this book will be extremely useful to students and scholars of Japanese and Asian politics.

chapter 1|31 pages

Factions

The ‘parties within a party’ weaken

chapter 2|34 pages

Party presidential elections and the distribution of positions

The increasing power of the party president

chapter 3|31 pages

The policy making process

The LDP’s system of preliminary review and prime minister-led politics

chapter 4|32 pages

National elections

The LDP Diet membership’s underlying two-tier structure

chapter 5|34 pages

The partner organisations of the LDP

Their votes and money in decline

chapter 6|31 pages

The local party and personal support organisations

Foundations of LDP’s strength

chapter |17 pages

Conclusion

The LDP today – shifting organisation and changing ideas