Second Mori Cabinet - Biblioteka.sk

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Second Mori Cabinet
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Second Mori Cabinet

86th Cabinet of Japan
Date formedJuly 4, 2000
Date dissolvedApril 26, 2001
People and organisations
Head of stateEmperor Akihito
Head of governmentYoshirō Mori
Member partyLDP-NKP-NCP coalition
Status in legislatureMajority coalition
Opposition partyDemocratic Party of Japan
Opposition leaderYukio Hatoyama
History
Election2000 general election
PredecessorFirst Mori Cabinet
SuccessorFirst Koizumi Cabinet

The Second Mori Cabinet governed Japan between July 2000 and April 2001 as a coalition government under the leadership of Prime Minister Yoshirō Mori of the Liberal Democratic Party. The cabinet was formed after the LDP-NKP-NCP coalition was returned to office with a substantially reduced majority in the June 25 general election, and inaugurated after Mori's re-election by the National Diet on July 4.[1] Unlike his first cabinet, which retained all of former Prime Minister Keizō Obuchi's ministers, Mori introduced several personnel changes, although this was done with reference to LDP factions.[2]

Mori administration

Administrative reforms begun under Prime Minister Hashimoto came into effect during the Mori government's second term, resulting in the merger, renaming or creation of several ministries and cabinet posts.[3][4] Two reshuffles of the second Mori Cabinet took place, the first in December 2000 in which a large number of ministers were replaced and ministerial portfolios were allocated in anticipation of the planned overhaul in government structures. Hashimoto was brought back into cabinet to oversee further government reforms.[5] When the second reshuffle occurred one month later no ministers were moved, but instead the changes in ministries and offices came into effect. The powers of the Prime Minister's office were increased and the number of ministers was reduced through mergers, for example the Home Affairs, Management and Co-ordination, and Posts and Communications briefs were combined to become the Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications.[6]

Mori was a deeply unpopular leader throughout his year-long term, with several gaffes, scandals and resignations of government and party figures causing his approval ratings to fall below 10 percent.[7][8] At the end of 2000, several LDP members launched an abortive effort to remove Mori through a vote of no-confidence, this failed, though it further damaged his government's standing.[9][10][11] In the spring of 2001, Mori announced that the election for LDP president would be brought forward from the autumn, which was in effect a resignation announcement since he was not expected to stand again for the leadership.[12][13] Mori then confirmed his intention to stand down at the beginning of April and remained in office for several more weeks until Junichiro Koizumi was elected as his successor and became Prime Minister on April 26.[14][15]

Election of the prime minister

4 July 2000
House of Representatives
Absolute majority (241/480) required
Choice First Vote
Votes
checkYYoshirō Mori
284 / 480
Yukio Hatoyama
130 / 480
Ichiro Ozawa
22 / 480
Tetsuzo Fuwa
20 / 480
Takako Doi
19 / 480
Koji Kakizawa
1 / 480
Torao Tokuda [ja]
1 / 480
Motoo Shiina [ja]
1 / 480
Abstentions (Including blank ballots)
2 / 480
Source Diet Minutes - 148th Session

List of ministers

  Liberal Democratic
  New Komeito
  New Conservative
  Independent
R = Member of the House of Representatives
C = Member of the House of Councillors

Cabinet

Second Mori Cabinet from July 4, 2000 to December 5, 2000
Portfolio Minister Term of office
Prime Minister Yoshirō Mori R April 5, 2000 - April 26, 2001
Minister of Justice Okiharu Yasuoka R July 4, 2000 - December 5, 2000
Minister of Foreign Affairs Yōhei Kōno R October 5, 1999 - April 26, 2001
Minister of Finance Kiichi Miyazawa R July 30, 1998 - April 26, 2001
Minister of Education
Director of the Science and Technology Agency
Tadamori Oshima R July 4, 2000 - December 5, 2000
Minister of Health and Welfare Yūji Tsushima R July 4, 2000 - December 5, 2000
Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Yoichi Tani R July 4, 2000 - December 5, 2000
Minister of International Trade and Industry Takeo Hiranuma R July 4, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Minister of Transport
Director of the Hokkaido Development Agency
Hajime Morita R July 4, 2000 - December 5, 2000
Minister of Posts and Telecommunications Kozo Hirabayashi R July 4, 2000 - December 5, 2000
Minister of Labour Yoshio Yoshikawa C July 4, 2000 - December 5, 2000
Minister of Construction
Director of the National Land Agency
Chikage Ogi C July 4, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Minister of Home Affairs
Director of the National Public Safety Commission
Mamoru Nishida R July 4, 2000 - December 5, 2000
Chief Cabinet Secretary
Director of the Okinawa Development Agency
Hidenao Nakagawa R July 4, 2000 - October 27, 2000
Yasuo Fukuda R October 27, 2000 - May 7, 2004
Chairman of the Financial Reconstruction Commission Kimitaka Kuze C July 4, 2000 - July 30, 2000
Hideyuki Aizawa R July 30, 2000 - December 5, 2000
Director of the Management and Coordination Agency Kunihiro Tsuzuki C October 5, 1999 - December 5, 2000
Director of the Japan Defense Agency Kazuo Torashima R July 4, 2000 - December 5, 2000
Director of the Economic Planning Agency Taichi Sakaiya - July 30, 1998 - December 5, 2000
Director of the Environment Agency Yoriko Kawaguchi - July 4, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Deputy Secretaries
Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary (Political Affairs - House of Representatives) Shinzo Abe R July 4, 2000 - September 22, 2003
Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary (Political Affairs - House of Councillors) Kosei Ueno C July 4, 2000 - September 22, 2003
Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary (Bureaucrat) Teijiro Furukawa - February 24, 1995 - September 22, 2003

Changes

  • July 30, 2000 - Chairman of the Financial Reconstruction Commission Kimitaka Kuze resigned as the result of a payments scandal and was replaced with Hideyuki Aizawa.[16]
  • October 27, 2000 - Chief Cabinet Secretary Hidenao Nakagawa resigned after being accused in the press of having connections to far-right groups, and of having an extramarital affair which led him to leak confidential information. He was replaced with Yasuo Fukuda.[17]

Reshuffle before 2001 Central Government Reform

Second Mori Cabinet from December 5, 2000 to January 6, 2001
Portfolio Minister Term of Office
Prime Minister Yoshirō Mori R April 5, 2000 - April 26, 2001
Minister of Justice Masahiko Kōmura R December 5, 2000 - April 26, 2001
Minister of Foreign Affairs Yōhei Kōno R October 5, 1999 - April 26, 2001
Minister of Finance Kiichi Miyazawa R July 30, 1998 - April 26, 2001
Minister of Education
Director of the Science and Technology Agency
Nobutaka Machimura R December 5, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Minister of Health and Welfare
Minister of Labour
Chikara Sakaguchi R December 5, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Yoshio Yatsu R December 5, 2000 - 26 April 2001
Minister of International Trade and Industry Takeo Hiranuma R July 4, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Minister of Transport
Minister of Construction
Director of the Hokkaido Development Agency
Director of the National Land Agency
Chikage Ogi C July 4, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Minister of Posts and Telecommunications
Minister of Home Affairs
Director of the Management and Coordination Agency
Toranosuke Katayama C December 5, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuo Fukuda R October 27, 2000 - May 7, 2004
Director of the National Public Safety Commission Bunmei Ibuki R December 5, 2000 - April 26, 2001
Chairman of the Financial Reconstruction Commission Hakuo Yanagisawa R December 5, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Director of the Japan Defense Agency Toshitsugu Saito R December 5, 2000 - 26 April 2001
Director of the Economic Planning Agency Fukushiro Nukaga R December 5, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Director of the Environment Agency Yoriko Kawaguchi - July 4, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Minister of State for Administrative Reform
Director of the Okinawa Development Agency
Ryutaro Hashimoto R December 5, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Minister of State (Science and Technology Policy) Takashi Sasagawa R December 5, 2000 - January 6, 2001
Deputy Secretaries
Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary (Political Affairs - House of Representatives) Shinzo Abe R July 4, 2000 - September 22, 2003
Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary (Political Affairs - House of Councillors) Kosei Ueno C July 4, 2000 - September 22, 2003
Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary (Bureaucrat) Teijiro Furukawa - February 24, 1995 - September 22, 2003

Reshuffle after 2001 Central Government Reform

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Second_Mori_Cabinet
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Second Mori Cabinet from January 6, 2001 to April 26, 2001
Portfolio Minister Term of Office
Prime Minister Yoshirō Mori R April 5, 2000 - April 26, 2001
Minister of Finance Kiichi Miyazawa R July 30, 1998 - April 26, 2001
Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications Toranosuke Katayama C January 6, 2001 - September 22, 2003
Minister of Justice Masahiko Kōmura R December 5, 2000 - April 26, 2001
Minister of Foreign Affairs Yōhei Kōno R October 5, 1999 - April 26, 2001
Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Nobutaka Machimura R January 6, 2001 - April 26, 2001
Minister of Health, Labour, and Welfare Chikara Sakaguchi R January 6, 2001 - September 27, 2004
Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Yoshio Yatsu R December 5, 2000 - April 26, 2001
Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Takeo Hiranuma R January 6, 2001 - September 22, 2003
Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism Chikage Ogi C January 6, 2001 - September 22, 2003