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Second Hashimoto Cabinet

Second Hashimoto Cabinet
Flag of Japan.svg
83rd cabinet of Japan
Hashimoto Ryūtarō.jpg
Date formed November 7, 1996
Date dissolved July 30, 1998
People and organisations
Head of state Emperor Akihito
Head of government Ryutaro Hashimoto
Member party LDP
Status in legislature Minority government (with SDP and NPS support) (1996-97)
LDP Majority government (1997-98)
Opposition party New Frontier Party (1996-97)
Democratic Party (1997-98)
Democratic Party of Japan (1998)
Opposition leader Ichirō Ozawa (1995-97)
Naoto Kan (1997-98)
History
Election(s) 1996 general election
1998 councillors election
Predecessor First Hashimoto Cabinet
Successor Obuchi Cabinet

The Second Hashimoto Cabinet governed Japan from November 1996 to July 1998 under the leadership of Ryutaro Hashimoto.

Hashimoto had become Prime Minister in January 1996 at the head of a three-party coalition, and was returned to office in the general election of November 1996. While the coalition parties (the Liberal Democratic Party, the Social Democratic Party and the New Party Sakigake) won a slim majority in the House of Representatives, the SDP and NPS had seen their popularity collapse due to their association with the coalition, and decided to remain outside the government. Therefore, Hashimoto formed a minority, wholly LDP government (the first since 1993) with the promise of SDP and NPS support when he was elected by the National Diet on November 7. He promised to continue his policies of "six great reforms" in the areas of administration, financial markets, education, social security, fiscal policy and economic policy, and appointed several former ministers to cabinet to help achieve this.

Less than a year into Hashimoto's second term in September 1997, the LDP regained a slim majority in the lower house due to defections from, and eventual break up of the opposition New Frontier Party, although the government maintained its alliance with the SDP and NPS. Several days later, Hashimoto conducted a cabinet reshuffle, which backfired when he was severely criticised for his appointment of Koko Sato, who had been convicted of bribery in relation to the Lockheed Scandal. This criticism forced Sato to resign after only 11 days in office. The government was damaged further when Finance Minister Hiroshi Mitsuzuka resigned in January 1998 because of a corruption scandal that had been uncovered in the Finance Ministry. At the same time, as part of efforts to close the budget deficit, Hashimoto's government raised the consumption tax in 1998, which negatively affected consumer demand and caused a recession at a time of high unemployment.


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