• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Gender equality in Japan? Ruling party race shows female PM is still a way off

September 29, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

September 29, 2021

By Elaine Lies

TOKYO (Reuters) – The secretaries handing out ballots as Japan’s ruling party chose the next prime minister on Wednesday were all women. The power brokers and lawmakers doing the voting were overwhelmingly men.

For the first time ever, two women stood in the race to become leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, whose parliamentary dominance means the winner will become the new premier.

The obstacles before them – and all Japanese women – were on display as rows of mostly dark-suited men in the LDP party gathered to vote for their next leader.

The winner, Fumio Kishida, has spoken about diversity, but few are optimistic about imminent, significant change in a nation where just under 10% of members of parliament are women and 8.1% of company presidents are female.

“The environment for a woman to become prime minister still hasn’t been reliably created,” said youth activist Momoko Nojo.

“It’s not that there aren’t potential leaders, but just from looking at the voting it was very clear that those who vote and choose are LDP lawmakers ….and when you look at the number of women in parliament, it’s still very low.”

In 2020, Japan fell in a global ranking of gender parity in a World Economic Forum report, ranking 121 out of 153 nations last year compared to 101 in 2012 when Shinzo Abe won the prime minister job for a second time.

As recently as 2018, a internal investigation found a major medical school in the country had been cutting women’s entrance-exam scores for years.

From the start, the two women in the party leadership race – Sanae Takaichi and Seiko Noda – were seen as longshots despite having cabinet experience and decades-long political careers.

Out of the two, the ultra-conservative Takaichi gained more popularity. That was partly due to Abe’s backing but also thanks to support for her conservative views, such as opposing separate surnames for married couples and supporting males-only succession for the Imperial family.

Though Abe touted “womenomics” and vowed to make Japan a nation where “women can shine,” his government was forced to delay its target of raising the percentage of women in leadership posts to 30 percent by a decade to 2030 from 2020. Women make up fewer than 10 percent of managers at most Japanese companies.

“The (LDP) is itself very much lagging behind in promoting gender equality in the party, and the kind of women who are in more leadership positions tend to be, of course, very conservative also and not necessarily feminists,” said Koichi Nakano, a Sophia University political science professor.

Women in Tokyo agreed.

“They’re all extolling gender equality, but it all seems to just be a show this time,” said 60-year-old Yuko Sakamoto.

“That’s really, really obvious.”

(Additional reporting by Rikako Maruyama and Irene Wang; Editing by Ana Nicolaci da Costa)

Source Link Gender equality in Japan? Ruling party race shows female PM is still a way off

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. Evacuated Afghans, hoping to resettle in U.S., face extended limbo in third countries
  2. Daily Crunch: Fintech startup Jeeves snags $500M valuation after $57M Series B
  3. Tyk raises $35M for its open-source, open-ended approach to enterprise API management
  4. Malaysia says auditor KPMG to pay $80 million in 1MDB settlement

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • The First Humans Were Hunted By Leopards, Scientists Have No Clue What These Marine “Y-Larvae” Grow Into, And Much More This Week
  • Operation Beluga: In 1985, An Icebreaker Playing Classical Music Saved 2,000 Beluga Whales From Certain Death
  • Getting Bats Drunk, Lizards’ Pizza Preferences, And Praising Narcissists Win Big At 2025 Ig Nobel Awards
  • Who Was The First Person To See The Moon Through A Telescope?
  • How Do You Weigh A Single Cell? Turns Out, There’s A Few Options
  • Should We Sleep Outside? Turns Out There Are Some Benefits
  • A US Federal Committee Is Meeting To Discuss Vaccines – Here’s What You Should Know
  • Neanderthal Noises, Dome-Headed Dinosaurs, And Mystery Larvae
  • Over Half Of Migrating Wildebeests Are Seemingly “Missing” In Latest Survey
  • Meet The Chewbacca Coral, A Ridiculously Fluffy New Species Discovered In The Deep Sea
  • Why Are School Buses Painted Yellow In The US?
  • What Are The Symptoms Of The “Stratus” COVID-19 Subvariant That’s Hitting The USA?
  • Intrepid Jaguar Swims Over 1 Kilometer, Smashing Previous Distance Record By More Than 6 Times
  • Breakthrough 3D Bioprinted Mini Placentas May Help Solve “One Of Medicine’s Great Mysteries”
  • Meet The “Grue Jay”: A Bizarre Rare Bird Spotted In Texas Is A Unique Hybrid Of Two Different Species
  • 21 Grams Experiment: In 1907, A Doctor Tried To Prove The Existence Of The Soul Using Weighing Scales
  • The World’s Oldest Known Cake Is Over 4,000 Years Old, And It Sounds Pretty Delicious
  • An Ominous Haze Lurks Over The Deadliest Volcano In US, But USGS Says A Repeat Of 1980 Isn’t Coming
  • Hayabusa2’s Target Asteroid Is 4 Times Smaller Than Thought – Can It Still Touch Down On It?
  • In 2011, Slavc The Wolf Journeyed 1,000 Miles To Begin Verona’s First Wolf Pack In 100 Years
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version