Tsuneko Akamatsu


Tsuneko Akamatsu was a Japanese politician who served in the House of Councillors.

Early life and education

Tsuneko Akamatsu was born in Tokuyama, Yamaguchi, on 11 August 1897, to Yasuko and Shōtō Akamatsu, the high priest at Nishi Hongan-ji. Her grandfather,, also held the position of high priest at Nishi Hongan-ji. Three of her brothers became university professors. Her brother Katsumaro Akamatsu was elected to the House of Representatives in 1937, but purged from politics after World War II.
Akamatsu entered the Kyoto Women's University in 1913, and met Toyohiko Kagawa while attending it. She ended her education in order to focus on the socialist movement. In 1923, she moved to Tokyo and worked with Kagawa's relief efforts after the Great Kantō earthquake.

Activism

The Japan General Federation of Labour invited her to join its women's division in 1925, and was chief of the organization's Women's Department from 1934 to 1940. Ichikawa Fusae, Akamatsu, and Natsu Kawasaki formed the Women's Postwar Counter-Measures Committee on 25 August 1945, to push for women's suffrage. Akamatsu was a founding member of the Women's Democratic Club, an organization meant to promote female political participation, alongside Yoko Matsuoka, Setsuko Hani, Shidzue Katō, Miyamoto Yuriko, and others. Tanino Setsu and Akamatsu convinced Golda Stander, an American occupation officer, to require menstrual leave in Japanese law.

Political career

Ten women won seats in the House of Councillors in the 1947 elections, including Akamatsu with the support of the Japan Socialist Party. She was reelected in 1953, and 1959. During her tenure in the House of Councillors she served as Parliamentary Vice-Minister of Health and Welfare in the Ashida Cabinet and chaired of the Labor Committee in 1950. She was a founding member of the Democratic Socialist Party in 1960.
Akamatsu was campaigning in Sendai in 1964, when she collapsed. She died in Nirayama, Shizuoka, in 1965.

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