Third Koizumi Cabinet | |
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89th cabinet of Japan |
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Date formed | September 21, 2005 |
Date dissolved | September 26, 2006 |
People and organisations | |
Head of government | Junichiro Koizumi |
Head of state | Emperor Akihito |
Member party | LDP-NKP coalition |
Status in legislature | HoR: LDP majority (coalition supermajority) HoC: Coalition majority |
Opposition party | Democratic Party of Japan |
Opposition leader |
Seiji Maehara (2005-2006) Ichirō Ozawa (2006) |
History | |
Election(s) | 2005 general election |
Predecessor | Second Koizumi Cabinet |
Successor | First Abe Cabinet |
The Third Koizumi Cabinet governed Japan for the final year of Junichiro Koizumi's term as Prime Minister, from September 2005 to September 2006, following the landslide victory of his coalition in the "postal election" of 2005.
Following the his re-election by the National Diet on September 21, Koizumi did not make any ministerial changes when inaugurating his third cabinet, keeping his previous team in place to focus on the re-introduction and passage of the bills to privatize Japan Post, which had formed the basis for his re-election campaign. Once this was accomplished, Koizumi conducted his final cabinet reshuffle on October 31 at the end of the Diet session. This reshuffle promoted several potential successors including Sadakazu Tanigaki, who was reappointed as Finance Minister, Tarō Asō, who was moved to become Foreign Minister, and Shinzō Abe, who was promoted from LDP Secretary General to the post of Chief Cabinet Secretary. Koizumi also promoted Heizō Takenaka his long-serving minister for economic reform, to the position of Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications to oversee the implementation of postal and administrative reform.
Since 1980, the Liberal Democratic Party has limited its leader to two consecutive terms, meaning that Koizumi was bound to stand down as Prime Minister in September 2006 when his second term expired. This gave him just one year following his re-election to conclude the reforms he had advocated during his terms of office, though he admitted in September 2005 that some would not be achieved in that time, such as constitutional revision to allow the Self-Defence Forces full military status. During the final session of the Diet under Koizumi's premiership, 82 out of 91 government bills were passed, including administrative and healthcare reforms, though education, constitutional and criminal law reforms were not enacted. Despite calls from some members of the LDP and the Komeito to amend party rules and allow him to stay on, Koizumi adhered to the term limit and retired in September 26, 2006.
Liberal Democratic
New Komeito
Independent
R = Member of the House of Representatives
C = Member of the House of Councillors