Shintaro Ishihara
Shintaro Ishihara was a Japanese politician and writer, who served as the Governor of Tokyo from 1999 to 2012. Being the former leader of the radical right Sunrise Party, later merged with Toru Hashimoto's Japan Restoration Party out of which he split his faction into the Party for Japanese Kokoro, he was one of the most prominent ultranationalists in modern Japanese politics. Ishihara was infamous for his misogynistic comments, his xenophobic views and his racist remarks against Chinese and Koreans in Japan, including his use of the antiquated pejorative term "sangokujin". He was also a denier of the Nanjing Massacre.
A critic of relations between Japan and the United States, his artistic accomplishments included his authorship of a prize-winning novel, his authorship of best-sellers, and his work in theater, film, and journalism. His 1989 book, The Japan That Can Say No, co-authored with Sony chairman Akio Morita, called on the authors' countrymen to stand up to America.
After an early career as a writer and a film director, Ishihara served as in the House of Councillors from 1968 to 1972, then he served as in the House of Representatives from 1972 to 1995, just four years before he served as Governor of Tokyo from 1999 to 2012. He resigned from the governorship to briefly co-lead the Sunrise Party, before he joined the Japan Restoration Party upon his return to the House of Representatives in the 2012 general election. He unsuccessfully sought re-election in the general election of November 2014, and officially left politics the following month.
In October 2021, Ishihara was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer while his wife, Noriko had ruptured aortic aneurysm, and given only three months to live amid a routine physical exam. Ishihara died from its complications on 1 February 2022, at the age of 89.
Early life and artistic career
Shintaro Ishihara was born on 30 September 1932 in Suma-ku, Kobe. His father, Kiyoshi Ishihara, an employee, later a general manager, of a shipping company, and his mother, Mitsuko Ishihara, a daughter of Sannosuke Kato from Hiroshima. He grew up in Zushi, Kanagawa, parts of Greater Tokyo Area. In 1952, Ishihara entered Hitotsubashi University, and he graduated in 1956. Just two months before graduation, Ishihara won the Akutagawa Prize for the novel Season of the Sun. His brother Yujiro played a supporting role in the movie adaptation of the novel. Ishihara had dabbled in directing a couple of films starring his brother. Regarding these early years as a filmmaker, he said to a Playboy Magazine interviewer in 1990 that "If I had remained a movie director, I can assure you that I would have at least become a better one than Akira Kurosawa".In the early 1960s, he concentrated on writing, including plays, novels, and a musical version of Treasure Island. One of his later novels, Lost Country, speculated about Japan under the control of the Soviet Union. He also ran a theatre company, and found time to visit the North Pole, race his yacht The Contessa and cross South America on a motorcycle. He wrote a memoir of his journey, Nanbei Odan Ichiman Kiro.
From 1966 to 1967, he covered the Vietnam War at the request of Yomiuri Shimbun, and the experience influenced his decision to enter politics. He also was mentored by the influential author and political "fixer" Tsûsai Sugawara.
Political career
In 1968, Ishihara ran as a candidate on the Liberal Democratic Party national slate for the House of Councillors. He placed first on the LDP list with an unprecedented 3 million votes. After four years in the upper house, Ishihara ran for the House of Representatives representing the second district of Tokyo, and again won election.In 1973, he joined with thirty other LDP lawmakers in the anti-communist Seirankai or "Blue Storm Group"; the group gained notoriety for sealing a pledge of unity in their own blood.
Ishihara ran for Governor of Tokyo in 1975 but lost to the popular Socialist incumbent Ryokichi Minobe. Minobe was 71 at the time, and Ishihara criticized him as being "too old".
Ishihara returned to the House of Representatives afterward, and worked his way up the party's internal ladder, serving as Director-General of the Environment Agency under Takeo Fukuda and Minister of Transport under Noboru Takeshita. During the 1980s, Ishihara was a highly visible and popular LDP figure, but was unable to win enough internal support to form a true faction and move up the national political ladder. In 1983, his campaign manager put up stickers throughout Tokyo stating that Ishihara's political opponent was an defector from North Korea. Ishihara denied that this was discrimination, saying that the public had a right to know.
In 1989, shortly after losing a highly contested race for the party presidency, Ishihara came to the attention of the West through his book The Japan That Can Say No, co-authored with Sony chairman Akio Morita. The book called on his fellow countrymen to stand up to America.
Governor of Tokyo
In the 1999 Tokyo gubernatorial election, he ran on an independent platform and was elected as Governor of Tokyo. Among Ishihara's moves as governor, he:- Cut metropolitan spending projects, including plans for a new Toei Subway line, and proposed the sale or leasing out of many metropolitan facilities.
- Imposed a new tax on banks' gross profits.
- Imposed a new hotel tax based on occupancy.
- Imposed restrictions on the operation of diesel-powered vehicles, following a highly publicized event where he held up a bottle of diesel soot before cameras and reporters.
- Imposed cap and trade energy tax.
- Proposed opening casinos in the Odaiba district.
- Declared in 2005 that Tokyo would bid for the 2016 Summer Olympics, which discouraged a bid by Fukuoka. Tokyo's bid lost to that of Rio de Janeiro.
- Set up the ShinGinko Tokyo bank to lend to SMEs in Tokyo. The project came under criticism- according to The Times, the bank had lost approximately 1 billion dollars' worth of taxpayers' money through inadequate customer risk assessments.
- Served as Chairman of Tokyo's successful bid to host the 2020 Summer Olympics.
- Generated controversy from PETA for the culling of the 37,000 crows that populated Tokyo.
On 25 October 2012, Ishihara announced he would resign as Governor of Tokyo to form a new political party in preparation for upcoming national elections. Following his announcement, the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly approved his resignation on 31 October 2012, officially ending his tenure as Governor of Tokyo for 4,941 days, the second-longest term after Shunichi Suzuki.
Sunrise Party
Ishihara's new national party was expected to be formed with members of the right-wing Sunrise Party of Japan, which he had helped to set up in 2010. When announced by co-leaders Ishihara and SPJ chief Takeo Hiranuma on 13 November 2012, Sunrise Party incorporated all five members of SPJ. SP would look to form a coalition with other small parties including Osaka Mayor Toru Hashimoto's Japan Restoration Party.In November 2012, Ishihara and his co-leader Hiranuma said that the Sunrise Party would pursue "establishment of an independent Constitution, beefing up of Japan's defense capabilities, and fundamental reform of fiscal management and tax systems to make them more transparent". The future of nuclear power and the upcoming consumption tax hike were issues it would have to address with potential coalition partners.
Sunrise Party merger with the Japan Restoration Party
Only four days after the Sunrise Party was launched, on 17 November 2012, Ishihara and Tōru Hashimoto, leader of the Japan Restoration Party, decided to merge their parties, with Ishihara becoming the head of the JRP. Your Party would not join the party, nor would Genzei Nippon, as the latter party's anti-consumption tax increase policy did not match the JRP's pro-consumption tax policy.Reporting on a poll in early December 2012, Asahi Shimbun characterized the merger with Japan Restoration Party as the latter having "swallowed up" Sunrise. The poll, in advance of the 16 December Lower House elections, also said the association with SP could hurt JRP's chances of forming a ruling coalition even though JRP was showing strength relative to the ruling DPJ.
Party for Future Generations
In December 2014 general elections, he was a candidate for the Party for Future Generations, an extreme right-wing party, but he was defeated. Following this, he retired from politics.Political views
Ishihara is generally described as having been one of Japan's most prominent extreme right-wing politicians. He was called "Japan's Jean-Marie Le Pen| Le Pen" on a program broadcast on Australia's ABC. He was affiliated with the openly ultranationalist organization Nippon Kaigi.Foreign relations
Ishihara was a long-term friend of the prominent Aquino family in the Philippines. He is credited with being the first person to inform future President Corazon Aquino about the assassination of her husband Ninoy Aquino, a former senator and exiled critic of Ferdinand Marcos, on 21 August 1983.Ishihara was often critical of Japan's foreign policy as being non-assertive. Regarding Japan's relationship with the U.S., he stated that "The country I dislike most in terms of U.S.–Japan ties is Japan, because it's a country that can't assert itself." As part of the criticism, Ishihara published a book co-authored with the then Prime minister of Malaysia, Mahathir Mohamad, titled "No" to ieru Ajia – tai Oubei e no hōsaku in 1994.
Ishihara was also long critical of the communist government of the People's Republic of China. He invited the Dalai Lama and the President of Taiwan Lee Teng-hui to Tokyo.
Ishihara was deeply interested in the North Korean abduction issue, and called for economic sanctions against North Korea. Following Ishihara's campaign to bid Tokyo for the 2016 Summer Olympics, he eased his criticism of the PRC government. He accepted an invitation to attend the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, and was selected as a torch-bearer for the Japan leg of the 2008 Summer Olympics torch relay.
Views on foreigners in Japan
On 9 April 2000, in a speech before a Self-Defense Forces group, Ishihara said crimes were repeatedly committed by illegally entered people, using the pejorative term sangokujin, and foreigners. He also speculated that in the event a natural disaster struck the Tokyo area, they would be likely to cause civil disorder. His comment invoked calls for his resignation, demands for an apology and fears among residents of Korean descent in Japan, as well as being criticised by the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination.Regarding this statement, Ishihara later said:
On 20 February 2006, Ishihara also said: "Roppongi is now virtually a foreign neighborhood. Africans—I don't mean African Americans—who don't speak English are there doing who knows what. This is leading to new forms of crime such as car theft. We should be letting in people who are intelligent."
On 17 April 2010, Ishihara said "many veteran lawmakers in the ruling-coalition parties are naturalized or the offspring of people naturalized in Japan".
Other controversial statements
In 1990, Ishihara said in a Playboy interview that the Rape of Nanjing was a fiction, claiming, "People say that the Japanese made a holocaust but that is not true. It is a story made up by the Chinese. It has tarnished the image of Japan, but it is a lie." He continued to defend this statement in the uproar that ensued. He also backed the film The Truth about Nanjing, a Japanese film that denies the atrocity, framing it as Chinese communist propaganda.In 2000, Ishihara, one of the eight judges for a literary prize, commented that homosexuality is abnormal, which caused an outrage in the gay community in Japan.
In a 2001 interview with women's magazine Shukan Josei, Ishihara said that he believed "old women who live after they have lost their reproductive function are useless and are committing a sin", adding that he "couldn't say this as a politician." He was criticized in the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly for these comments, but responded that the criticism was driven by "tyrant... old women."
During an inauguration of a university building in 2004, Ishihara stated that French is unqualified as an international language because it is "a language in which nobody can count", referring to the counting system in French, which is based on units of twenty for numbers from 70 to 99 rather than ten. The statement led to a lawsuit from several language schools in 2005. Ishihara subsequently responded to comments that he did not disrespect French culture by professing his love of French literature on Japanese TV news.
At a Tokyo IOC press briefing in 2009, Governor Ishihara dismissed a letter sent by environmentalist Paul Coleman regarding the contradiction of his promoting the Tokyo Olympic 2016 bid as 'the greenest ever' while destroying the forested mountain of Minamiyama, the closest 'Satoyama' to the centre of Tokyo, by angrily stating Coleman was 'Just a foreigner, it does not matter'. Then, on continued questioning by investigative journalist Hajime Yokota, he stated 'Minamiyama is a Devil's Mountain that eats children.' Then he went on to explain how unmanaged forests 'eat children' and implied that Yokota, a Japanese national, was betraying his nation by saying 'What nationality are you anyway?' This was recorded on film and turned into a video that was sent around the world as the Save Minamiyama Movement.
In 2010, Ishihara claimed that Korea under Japanese rule was absolutely justified due to historical pressures from Qing dynasty and Imperial Russia.
In reference to the Great East Japan earthquake and tsunami and the subsequent Fukushima nuclear disaster, which claimed the lives of 20,000 people, Ishihara said that "the triple disaster was 'divine punishment from heaven', because Japanese people have become a greedy":
However, he also commented that the victims of triple disaster in Japan were pitiable.
This speech was quickly caused many controversies and critical responses from the public opinion, both inside and outside Japan. The governor of Miyagi expressed displeasure about Ishihara's speech amid Akihito's response the victims of triple disaster in Japan. Then, Ishihara had to apologize for his comments.
During the 2012 Summer Olympics, Ishihara stated that "Westerners practicing judo resembles beasts fighting. Internationalized judo has lost its appeal." He added, "In Brazil they put chocolate in norimaki, but I wouldn't call it sushi. Judo has gone the same way."
Ishihara has said that Japan ought to have nuclear weapons.
Proposal to buy the Senkaku Islands
On 15 April 2012, Ishihara made a speech in Washington, D.C., publicly stating his desire for Tokyo to purchase the Senkaku Islands, called the Diaoyu Islands by mainland China and Diaoyutai Islands in Taiwan, on behalf of Japan in an attempt to end the territorial dispute between China and Japan, causing uproars in Chinese society and increasing tension between the governments of China and Japan. The government of Japan bought the islands in an effort to preempt the provocative bid, although the Chinese side viewed the purchase as an effort by Japan to bring the islands under Japanese sovereignty.Personal life
Ishihara married to Japanese essayist, Noriko Ishihara, a Hiroshima bombing survivor. The couple have four sons: Nobuteru, a politician; Yoshizumi, an actor and weatherman; Hirotaka, a politician; and Nobuhiro, a painter and artist.His younger brother, Yujiro Ishihara was an actor and singer; his sister-in-law, Mie Ishihara was an actress; and his daughter-in-law, Risa Ishihara, was an actress and woman talent.
Illness and death
In October 2021, Ishihara was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and given only three months to live. As Ishihara wanted to spend his last days at home without feeling pain, according to his son, Nobuteru, who asked a doctor specializing in terminal care to prescribe him painkilling medication. His wife, Noriko, was also unwell due to ruptured aortic aneurysm.The couple's four sons and one daughter-in-law spent New Year's Day and other holidays at the house on a rotating basis with a resident nanny. Shintaro repeatedly told his son, Nobuteru, "Dying and boring", and "Please take care of everything else", as he wrote manuscripts on his sickbed.
Ishihara died at his home in Tokyo on 1 February 2022, at aged 89. About a month later on 8 March of the same year, his wife, Noriko had collapsed and died at aged 84. According to statements by his family and Japanese Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare, in both cases the cause of death was unrelated to Fukushima disaster and COVID-19 infection. Both of their bodies were cremated after their private funerals, and both of ashes were scattered at the sea.
They were survived by four sons, Nobuteru, Hirotaka, Yoshizumi, and Nobuhiro; and a daughter-in-law, Risa.
Books written by Ishihara
Taiyō no kisetsu, Season of the Sun, Winner of the Akutagawa Prize, 1956Kurutta kajitsu, Crazed Fruit, 1956Kanzen Na Yuugi, The Perfect Game, 1956Umi no chizu, Map of the Sea, 1958Seinen no ki, Tree of the Youth, 1959Gesshoku, Lunar Eclipse, 1959Nanbei ōdan ichi man kiro, 10 Thousand Kilometers Motoring across South AmericaSeishun to wa nanda, What does Youth Mean?, 1965Ōinaru umi e, To the Great Sea, 1965Kaeranu umi, Unretreating Sea, 1966Suparuta kyōiku, Spartan education, 1969Kaseki no mori, Petrified Forest, Minister of Education Prize, 1970Shintarō no seiji chousho, Shintaro's Political Record, 1970Shintarō no daini seiji chousho, Shintaro's Second Political Record, 1971Shin Wakan rōeishū, New Wakan rōeishū , 1973Yabanjin no daigaku, University of Barbarians, 1977Boukoku -Nihon no totsuzenshi, The Ruin of a Nation - Japan's Sudden Death, 1982 'Nō' to ieru Nihon , The Japan That Can Say No, 1989Soredemo 'Nō' to ieru Nihon. Nichibeikan no konponmondai, The Japan That Still Can Say No - Principal problem of the Japan–US relations, 1990Waga jinsei no toki no toki, The Sublime Moment of my Life, 1990Danko 'No' to ieru Nihon, The Japan That Can Strongly Say No, 1991Mishima Yukio no nisshoku, The Eclipse of Yukio Mishima, 1991 'No' to ieru Asia ,The Asia That Can Say NO, 1994Kaze ni tsuite no kioku, My Memory about the Wind, 1994Otōto, Younger brother, Mainichi Publishing Culture Award Special Award, 1996 'Chichi' nakushite kuni tatazu , No Country can Stand without "Father", 1997Sensen fukoku 'Nō' to ieru Nihon keizai -Amerika no kin'yū dorei kara no kaihō-, Declaration of War, Economy of Japan That Can Say No - Liberation from America's financial slavery, 1998Hokekyō o ikiru, To Live the Lotus Sutra, 1998Seisan, Eucharist, 1999Kokka naru gen'ei, An Illusion called Nation, 1999Amerika shinkō wo suteyo 2001 nen kara no nihon senryaku, Stop worshipping America - Japan strategy from 2001, 2000Boku wa kekkon shinai, I Won't Marry, 2001Ima 'Tamashii' no kyōiku, Now, 'Spirit' Education, 2001Ei'en nare, nihon -moto sōri to tochiji no katariai, Japan Forever – A Talk between Ex-Premier and Tokyo governor, 2001Oite koso jinsei, To get Old is the Life, 2002Hi no shima, Island of Fire, 2008Watashi no suki na nihonjin, My Favorite Japanese People, 2008Saisei, Recovery, 2010Shin Darakuron -Gayoku to tenbatsu,''New "On Decadance" - Greed and Divine Punishment'', 2011Translation work
- Robert Ringer: Winning Through Intimidation, 1978
Translations in English
The Japan That Can Say No, Simon & Schuster, 1991,. Touchstone Books, 1992,. Cassette version. Disk version, 1993,.Film career
He acted in six films, including Crazed Fruit and The Hole, and co-directed the 1962 film Love at Twenty. He wrote the story for films such as Pale Flower.Allusions in film
Ishihara served as a model for the character of Shinsaburô Ishiyama, a fictional Japanese Minister of Defence invariably replying No! to all foreign requests, in the 2006 satiric comedy ''Nihon Igai Zenbu Chinbotsu.''Honours
- Akutagawa Prize
- Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun