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Tokyo gubernatorial election, 2014

Tokyo gubernatorial election, 2014
Japan
2012 ←
9 February 2014 → 2016

Turnout 4,930,251 (46.14%)
  Masuzoe 210 Herman.jpg Morihiro Hosokawa cropped 1 Morihiro Hosokawa 19930927.jpg
Candidate Yōichi Masuzoe Kenji Utsunomiya Morihiro Hosokawa
Party Independent Independent Independent
Popular vote 2,112,979 982,595 956,063
Percentage 42.86% 19.93% 19.39%
Supported by LDP, NK JCP, SDP, GJ DPJ, PLP, UP

  Toshio Tamogami 2014-02-02.jpg Kazuma Ieiri 2014.JPG Nakamatsu.jpg
Candidate Toshio Tamogami Kazuma Ieiri Yoshiro Nakamatsu
Party Independent Independent Independent
Popular vote 610,865 88,936 64,774
Percentage 12.39% 1.80% 1.31%
Supported by ISS - -

Governor before election

Naoki Inose
Independent

Elected Governor

Yoichi Masuzoe
Independent


Naoki Inose
Independent

Yoichi Masuzoe
Independent

Tokyo held a gubernatorial election on February 9, 2014 to replace outgoing Governor Naoki Inose, who resigned effective December 24, 2013.Yōichi Masuzoe was declared the winner in exit polling, with a substantial lead over the fifteen other candidates. His final tally was 2,112,979 votes (42.86%), with his two closest competitors Morihiro Hosokawa and Kenji Utsunomiya failing to break the 20% mark. Total turnout was 4,930,251 (46.14%), significantly lower than the 62.6% turnout in the 2012 election.

Tokyo governor Naoki Inose abruptly resigned in December 2013 following a month-long investigation into a political funds scandal. His resignation came in the midst of various preparations for the 2020 Summer Olympics, which had been awarded to Tokyo earlier in the year, including the formation of an organization committee (due by February 2014), the allocation of 10.3 billion yen in Olympics-related funding, and negotiation with the national government over the construction of the new National Olympic Stadium.

The election campaign was set to officially begin on January 23, 2014 and was one of three critical electoral tests for the ruling Liberal Democratic Party in early 2014, along with the January 19 mayoral election in Nago, Okinawa (widely viewed as a referendum on the relocation plan of Marine Corps Air Station Futenma), in which the incumbent mayor, who is against the plan, was re-elected, and the late February gubernatorial election in Yamaguchi Prefecture.


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