List of districts of the House of Councillors of Japan
The House of Councillors in the Japanese national Diet is made up of 242 members elected from 47 districts plus a national proportional representation list. Until 2015, the 47 districts have coincided with the 47 prefectures of Japan. In order to address the imbalance in voter representation between rural and urban voters, the Public Officers Election Law was amended in 2012 and again in 2015. The 2015 amendment sees the merger of the two smallest districts, Tottori and Shimane, to create a combined Tottori-Shimane at-large district, as well as the merger of Kochi and Tokushima districts (the third- and fourth-smallest districts) to create a combined Tokushima-Kōchi at-large district. Other changes to the number of Councilors have also been made to address the imbalance.[1] Below is a table of districts, sortable by name, magnitude and voter disparity, based on the official number of registered voters as of September 2015.
Prefecture | Registered voters[2] |
Magnitude | Disparity | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pre-reform | Post-reform | |||
Aichi | 5,927,668 | 7[notes 1] | ||
Akita | 888,496 | 2 | ||
Aomori | 1,122,948 | 2 | ||
Chiba | 5,092,741 | 6 | ||
Ehime | 1,169,427 | 2 | ||
Fukui | 644,447 | 2 | ||
Fukuoka | 4,135,977 | 5[notes 2] | ||
Fukushima | 1,607,908 | 2 | ||
Gifu | 1,666,610 | 2 | ||
Gunma | 1,616,400 | 2 | ||
Hiroshima | 2,313,131 | 4 | ||
Hokkaido | 4,537,448 | 5[notes 2] | ||
Hyogo | 4,536,912 | 5[notes 2] | ||
Ibaraki | 2,411,307 | 4 | ||
Ishikawa | 939,531 | 2 | ||
Iwate | 1,074,018 | 2 | ||
Kagawa | 818,470 | 2 | ||
Kagoshima | 1,371,073 | 2 | ||
Kanagawa | 7,421,431 | 8 | ||
Kōchi | 619,566 | 1[notes 3] | ||
Kumamoto | 1,473,659 | 2 | ||
Kyoto | 2,088,383 | 4 | ||
Mie | 1,489,396 | 2 | ||
Miyagi | 1,907,518 | 3[notes 4] | ||
Miyazaki | 918,533 | 2 | ||
Nagano | 1,737,214 | 3[notes 4] | ||
Nagasaki | 1,148,570 | 2 | ||
Nara | 1,140,129 | 2 | ||
Niigata | 1,925,565 | 3[notes 4] | ||
Ōita | 972,380 | 2 | ||
Okayama | 1,566,428 | 2 | ||
Okinawa | 1,115,392 | 2 | ||
Osaka | 7,140,578 | 8 | ||
Saga | 679,289 | 2 | ||
Saitama | 5,933,788 | 6 | ||
Shiga | 1,121,066 | 2 | ||
Shimane | 576,629 | 1[notes 3] | ||
Shizuoka | 3,052,579 | 4 | ||
Tochigi | 1,621,930 | 2 | ||
Tokushima | 641,534 | 1[notes 3] | ||
Tokushima-Kochi | 1,261,100 | 1[notes 5] | ||
Tokyo | 10,947,527 | 11[notes 6] | ||
Tottori | 475,251 | 1[notes 3] | ||
Tottori-Shimane | 1,051,880 | 1[notes 5] | ||
Toyama | 888,832 | 2 | ||
Wakayama | 825,373 | 2 | ||
Yamagata | 937,920 | 2 | ||
Yamaguchi | 1,173,848 | 2 | ||
Yamanashi | 692,001 | 2 |
See also
References
- ↑ "Weighing Vote Disparity in Japan's Upper House". 30 July 2015. Retrieved 29 February 2016.
- ↑ As of 2 September 2015. "平成27年9月2日現在選挙人名簿及び在外選挙人名簿登録者数" [Number of resident and non-resident enrolled voters as of 2 September 2015] (in Japanese). 2 September 2015. Retrieved 29 February 2016.