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2023 Hokkaido gubernatorial election
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 2023 Hokkaido gubernatorial election was held on 9 April 2023, to elect the next governor of Hokkaido Prefecture.[1] It was held as part of the 2023 Japanese unified local elections. The incumbent governor of Hokkaido, independent candidate, Naomichi Suzuki, won his second landslide victory. This time against Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan candidate Maki Ikeda.[2]
Maki Ikeda, a newcomer candidate, attempted to position herself as a competent competitor to Suzuki.[3]
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Candidates
- Naomichi Suzuki, Incumbent Governor and former mayor of Yūbari backed by LDP and Komeito.
- Maki Ikeda, Former member of the House of Representatives from Hokkaido's proportional representation block backed by the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, Japanese Communist Party, Social Democratic Party, and the Democratic Party for the People.
- Yoshio Monbetsu,[4] Construction worker.
- Daisuke Mihara,[5] Former post office employee and barber. Ran as a single-issue candidate against the demolition of Hokkaido Centennial Memorial Tower.
Withdrawn candidates
- Mikuma, business investor who announced his candidacy at a press conference on March 10, 2023.[6] 5 days later, on March 15, they withdrew their candidacy.[7] The name "Mikuma" is a pseudonym and the candidate refused to state their actual name.
- Takashi Wada, furniture manufacturer, on March 8, 2023, he expressed his intention to run as a candidate during an interview.[8] Despite his declared candidacy, he failed to register as a candidate by the registration date. He would later run for the Hokkaido Prefectural Assembly for Ebetsu during the 2023 Hokkaido prefectural assembly election, which he lost.
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Campaigning
The election saw heavy campaigning by both major candidates.[9]
Suzuki primarily campaigned near the Pacific coast, making most of his speeches in Ishikari Subprefecture, Hidaka Subprefecture, and Tokachi Subprefecture. Suzuki leaned heavily upon the interests of agricultural and fishing cooperatives.
Ikeda would campaign most heavily along the northern coast, near the Sea of Japan, though her campaign initially centered in Hiyama Subprefecture, she would later move further south, shifting her focus to Hakodate. Ikeda would primarily campaign under plans of expanding welfare in the prefecture.[10]
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Results
Pie Chart
- Naomichi Suzuki (75.6%)
- Maki Ikeda (21.4%)
- Yoshio Monbetsu (1.81%)
- Daisuke Mihara (1.12%)
References
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