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Seiji Maehara

Japanese politician (born 1962) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seiji Maehara
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Seiji Maehara (前原 誠司, Maehara Seiji; born 30 April 1962) is a Japanese politician who has been a member of the House of Representatives of Japan since 1993.[1] He founded and led the political party, Free Education for All, before its merger into Nippon Ishin no Kai on 3 October 2024.[2] He has been co-leader of Ishin, serving alongside Osaka Governor Hirofumi Yoshimura since December 2024.

Quick Facts Co-leader of Nippon Ishin no Kai, Leader ...

Beginning his political career in Kyoto, Maehara was initially a member of smaller opposition parties before joining the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), serving as it's the leader of the from 2005 to 2006. After the DPJ was victorious in the 2009 general election, Maehara served as Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism and Minister of Foreign Affairs under the cabinets of Prime Ministers Yukio Hatoyama and Naoto Kan, before resigning from the cabinet in March 2011 after he acknowledged receiving illegal donations from a South Korean national living in Japan.[3] In 2016 Maehara contested for the leadership of the Democratic Party, the successor party of the DPJ, losing to Renho. He later replaced her as leader in 1 September 2017 until its dissolution later that month.[4] After spending some time with Kibō no Tō and the Democratic Party for the People (DPFP), Maehara founded a new party in 2023, Free Education for All, which was broadly centrist and focused on building a coalition against the LDP.[5] In preparation for the 2024 general election, the party merged with the Osaka-based Ishin no Kai party (Japan Innovation Party). Two months later, he was elected the party's co-leader and representative in the National Diet.

Maehara is viewed as a "China war hawk"[6][7] and a proponent of close ties with the United States.[8][9][10] He is also often viewed as being politically conservative.[4][11][12]

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Early life and education

Maehara was born in Kyoto to parents from Tottori Prefecture.

He attended the law faculty of Kyoto University, where he majored in international politics. He attended the Matsushita Institute of Government and Management from 1987 to 1991.

Early political career

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Prefectural and National politics

Maehara won election to the Kyoto Prefectural Assembly in 1991 with the support of, among others, future Diet member Keiro Kitagami. At the time, he was the youngest prefectural assemblyman in Kyoto history.

He was elected to the House of Representatives as a member of the Japan New Party of Morihiro Hosokawa in 1993. In 1994, he left the party and formed the "Democratic Wave" with several other young parliamentarians, but later that year joined the Sakigake Party, which was briefly part of the majority government. In 1998, he joined the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) when it was formed that same year.

As a member of the DPJ he focused on security affairs and often negotiated with the government. In the shadow governments he has served as the Shadow Minister for Security Affairs and Shadow Minister for the Defense Agency.

President of the DPJ

After the crushing defeat of the DPJ in the 2005 snap election and the resignation of DPJ leader Katsuya Okada, the elected representatives of the party met to choose a new leader. The two candidates were Naoto Kan and Maehara. Maehara defeated the 58-year-old Kan by a razor-thin count of 96–94 in open balloting by party members from both Houses of the Diet, with two members abstaining and two others having cast invalid votes. Maehara was appointed DPJ president on 17 September 2005.

However, Maehara's term as party leader was short lived. Although he initially led the party's criticism of the Koizumi administration, particularly in regards to connections between LDP lawmakers and scandal-ridden Livedoor, the revelation that a fake email was used to try to establish this link greatly damaged his credibility. The scandal led to the resignation of Representative Hisayasu Nagata and of Maehara as party leader on 31 March. New elections for party leader were held on 7 April, in which Ichirō Ozawa was elected president.

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In government

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2009
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2010
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2011
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2012
Official portraits of Seiji Maehara

In the 2009 Japanese general election, the Democratic Party won a two-thirds majority of the House of Representatives, allowing the party to form a new government. Maehara subsequently joined the new cabinet.

Minister of Land, Infrastructure and Transport

Maehara was appointed Minister of Land, Infrastructure and Transport on 16 September 2009 by Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama. In this role, he was the spokesman for a number of government initiatives, including:

  • Cessation of construction work on Yamba Dam
  • Opening Haneda Airport in Tokyo to long-haul international flights
  • Bankruptcy restructuring of Japan Airlines
  • Experimentation with reducing or eliminating tolls on the Japanese expressway network

Minister of Foreign Affairs

Then Prime Minister Naoto Kan reshuffled the cabinet effective 17 September 2010, making Maehara the youngest Minister of Foreign Affairs in postwar Japanese history. The main international relations event during his tenure as foreign minister was the 2010 Senkaku boat collision incident, which led to increased tensions between Japan and the People's Republic of China concerning their overlapping claims to the Senkaku Islands.

Resignation from the Cabinet

In March 2011, only four days before the 11 March earthquake and tsunami, Maehara resigned as Minister for Foreign Affairs after it emerged that he had accepted a political donation of ¥250,000 (approx. US$3,000)[13] from a 72-year-old South Korean permanent resident of Japan who operated a restaurant in Kyoto. Maehara had known the woman since junior high school,[14] but her foreign nationality made the donation illegal if it had been accepted intentionally.[15] Maehara apologised to the nation for only holding the post for 6 months and for "provoking distrust" over his political funding.[15] According to the Japan Times, the resignation would cause Japanese relations with the United States to weaken.[16] The donation was revealed by an opposing party politician, Shoji Nishida; The Economist described the incident as a scandal based on a technicality that primarily illustrates the unsatisfactory treatment of Koreans in Japan.[17]

Candidacy for Prime Minister

Following Kan's announced resignation in August 2011, Maehara initially planned to support Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda, but broke off this support due to disagreement over whether to raise the consumption tax, and declared his own candidacy for the presidency of the DPJ on 22 August.[18] He lost to Noda and Economy Minister Banri Kaieda in the first round of balloting on 29 August.

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In opposition

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Leader of the Democratic Party

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Maehara with Kenta Izumi in 2016.

In 2016, the DPJ merged with Japan Innovation Party forming the Democratic Party. Maehara attempted to make a comeback at the leadership in the first leadership election post-merger, but lost against former minister Renho.[19]

Renho resigned in July 2017 after the DP suffered a bad result in the 2017 Tokyo assembly elections.[20] A leadership election was immediately held to select the new leader of the party. Maehara was one of the candidates contesting the election, along with former Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano. Through his reliable support from conservative DP and former JIP members, Maehara comfortably won the leadership election with 60% of the points up for grabs.[21] He returned as the leader of the largest opposition party almost 12 years after ascending to the post for the first time.

Maehara's second stint as president was short and rocky. One of his first acts as the new president was to appoint rising-star lawmaker Shiori Yamao as secretary-general in his new executive. Immediately after her nomination, tabloid magazine Shukan Bunshun published an allegation of affair against Yamao. Whilst the details were inconclusive, Yamao resigned from the party less than a week after the affair was reported, widely seen as an effort to halt further decline of DP's fledgling support.[22] Maehara also faced a potential rival in Tokyo governor Yuriko Koike, who grew increasingly confident after her party's landslide win in the Tokyo Assembly elections and was rumoured of planning to form a conservative national party to face Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in the next general election.

Abe called a snap election less than three weeks to Maehara's ascension to the presidency. This threw the party into disarray, as it had not completed preparing its election platform. At the same day as Abe's election declaration, Koike finally launched a new party called Kibō no Tō (Party of Hope). Seeing Koike's high popularity at that time as a potential asset, Maehara coordinated with Koike on DP candidates' nominations for the election. Koike agreed to endorse DP candidates and Maehara effectively disbanded the party in order to allow the candidates run under the Kibō banner. However, despite Maehara's request, Koike imposed an ideological filter that effectively barred liberal-leaning members of the DP, such as Yukio Edano, from joining Kibō. This led Edano to form the Constitutional Democratic Party less than three weeks before election to house liberal DP members.[23] Maehara himself ran as independent.

Koike's multiple blunders during the campaign led Kibō to fall well short of high initial expectations, becoming the second largest opposition party behind the Edano-led CDP. Maehara, whose political gamble had backfired, was under heavy pressure to resign from his position as DP president. Maehara resigned from his post and from the party on 28 October 2017, ending his tumultuous second term as leader of the Democratic Party.[24]

DPFP and FEFA

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Maehara in June 2025.

Maehara joined Kibō in November 2017.[25] When Kibō merged with the Democratic Party in May 2018 to form the Democratic Party for the People (DPFP), Maehara also joined the DPFP.[26] He became critical of party leader Yuichiro Tamaki and his approach of collaborating with the LDP, and challenged Tamaki for the DPP leadership spot in 2023, claiming that he would focus on forming a collaborative front with other opposition parties outside of the JCP.[27][28][29] Following his defeat to Tamaki, he and several other DPP parliamentarians, including former Governor Yukiko Kada, split from the group to form Free Education for All. The new party is believed to be focused on building an opposition coalition, but several difficulties have come up, including the closeness of Maehara to Nippon Ishin no Kai, to which a RENGO spokesman said that the Union would be forced to pull support from the new party if it is "swallowed up by Nippon Ishin".[30] On 3 October 2024, the party merged into Nippon Ishin no Kai, with all, but Atsushi Suzuki, running under the Ishin banner.[31]

Co-leader of Ishin no Kai

Maehara was elected as co-leader of Ishin after the 2024 general election. While Osaka Governor Hirofumi Yoshimura was elected party leader, Maehara was made the party's parliamentary representative in the National Diet.[32]

He spoke at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in May 2025.[33]

After the 2025 House of Councilors election, in which Ishin lost 2 seats in the Upper House, Maehara and three other party executives announced their intention to resign.[34] After Maehara resigned as co-leader, former party Secretary-General Fujita Fumitake was elected to replace him on 8 August 2025.[35]

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Political positions

Maehara has been described has "unpredictable" regarding his work with fellow opposition parties.[36] Maehara supports amending Article 5 of Japan's Constitution.[33] In April 2025, he stated that the Japanese government should not pay more for the United States' military presence in the country, a demand made by President Donald Trump.[37] Maehara has advocated for a ban on political donations by corporations.[38]

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Personal life

Maehara met his wife, Ari, through Yasuyuki Nambu, the then-CEO of Pasona Group. Maehara credits Nambu for giving him the opportunity to meet his future wife. The couple met in June 1995 and have no children.[39]

Despite belonging to different political parties, Maehara has a good personal relationship with LDP President and Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba; the two are known to bond over their shared love and appreciation of trains.[40] Maehara enjoys taking photographs of trains as a hobby.[41] He was also friends with former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.[42]

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References

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