1996 Japanese general election

1996 Japanese general election

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Representatives elected in the Japanese general election, 1996 →

All 500 seats in the House of Representatives
251 seats needed for a majority
Turnout59.65% (Decrease7.61pp; Const. votes)
62.44% (New; PR votes)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Ryutaro Hashimoto 19960111.jpg
Ichiro Ozawa cropped 3 Yoshitaka Kimoto and Ichiro Ozawa 20010718.jpg
Naoto Kan 20071221 (cropped).jpg
Leader Ryutaro Hashimoto Ichirō Ozawa Naoto Kan
Party Liberal Democratic New Frontier Democratic
Last election 223 seats 156 seats[a] Did not exist
Seats won 239 156 52
Seat change Increase 16 Steady New
Constituency vote 21,836,096 15,812,326 6,001,666
% and swing 38.63% (Increase2.34pp) 27.97% (New) 10.62% (New)
Regional vote 18,205,955 15,580,053 8,949,190
% and swing 32.76% (New) 28.04% (New) 16.10% (New)

  Fourth party Fifth party
 
The-Zenei-1967-January-Special-1.png
Takako Doi in Tokyo congressist election 2.jpg
Leader Tetsuzo Fuwa Takako Doi
Party Communist Social Democratic
Last election 15 seats 70 seats[b]
Seats won 26 15
Seat change Increase 11 Decrease 55
Constituency vote 7,096,766 1,240,649
% and swing 12.55% (Increase3.85pp) 2.19% (Decrease13.24pp)
Regional vote 7,268,743 3,547,240
% and swing 13.08% (New) 6.38% (New)

Districts shaded according to winners' vote strength

Prime Minister before election

Ryutaro Hashimoto
Liberal Democratic

Elected Prime Minister

Ryutaro Hashimoto
Liberal Democratic

General elections were held in Japan on 20 October 1996. A coalition of the Liberal Democratic Party, New Party Sakigake and the Social Democratic Party, led by incumbent Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto of the LDP won the most seats.

These were the first elections held after the 1994 electoral reforms. Previously, each district was represented by multiple members, sometimes from the same party, causing intra-party competition. Under the new rules, each district nominated one representative, elected using first-past-the-post voting. A separate party-list vote was introduced for voters to choose their favored party in addition to votes for individual candidates, as a way to more accurately approximate the seats in the House of Representatives of Japan to the actual party votes, in an effort to achieve more proportional representation.
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