Jap Politics
According to Webster democracy is a government in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised by them directly or indirectly through a system of representation usually involving periodic elections. The question at hand is does this apply to Japan, or more specifically postwar Japan? If this isn't what Japan has then what type of government do they have? Garon and Mochizuki argue that it has been a managed form of democracy. What exactly is a managed democracy? These are the questions that I hope to answer. Garon and Mochizuki were describing the business like structure of the Japanese political system when they called it a managed democracy. This means that the democracy in Japan is a somewhat controlled system. The people don't really have any power; the members of the Diet control the government on their own terms. What they are basically saying is Japan doesn't really have a democracy, but if that's what it must be called then it should have the "managed" tagged to it for warning. Are Garon and Mochizuki correct in their statement? Yes, I believe that they have accurately described how Japan's government operates. Japan uses a system of "Democracy", that doesn't really fit the definition.
It's imperative that Koizumi keep the government evolving and not let it go stagnant or even worse let it go through a period of devolution. He received support form commoners and the elite when he was elected to the Diet. The system has gone from a modified one party system to one that is up for grabs at each election including the one this summer. For the past thirty years Japan has been one of the top countries in economic equality. If he is able to do this then he will be able to change the way Japan operates, just the way he wants to. With Koizumi getting support from multiple demographics he will have greater support in passing legislature. The Diet has started to represent the general population better, with the inclusion a women and non-elitists. This creates a kind of false security within the electorate. When you have an elitist society like this, rich males become the people in charge in all industries. However in it's present form Japan's government doesn't apply to the statement. Eventually I could foresee the middle class starting to take control of the Diet and then start to concentrate on more grassroots programs and such. If a person doesn't go to the right schools then his or her future is ruined. If the LDP is defeated this summer then so is Koizumi, which could land Japan back to where they started, or it may give them a jump-start to change and reform. It also helps to have a parliament that is modeled after one that has been in place for a long time and has worked. Still the number of women and minorities has increased recently.
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