1936 Japanese general election|
|
|
|
First party
|
Second party
|
Third party
|
|
|
|
SWK
|
Leader
|
Machida Chūji
|
Suzuki Kisaburō
|
Vacant
|
Party
|
Rikken Minseitō
|
Rikken Seiyūkai
|
Shōwakai
|
Last election
|
35.25%, 146 seats
|
32.25%, 301 seats
|
–
|
Seats won
|
205
|
174
|
18
|
Seat change
|
59
|
127
|
New party
|
Popular vote
|
4,444,413
|
4,188,029
|
531,772
|
Percentage
|
39.92%
|
37.62%
|
4.78%
|
Swing
|
4.67pp
|
20.58pp
|
New party
|
|
|
Fourth party
|
Fifth party
|
|
|
|
Leader
|
Abe Isoo
|
Adachi Kenzō
|
Party
|
Shakai Taishūtō
|
Kokumin Dōmei
|
Last election
|
2.59%, 5 seats[a]
|
–
|
Seats won
|
18
|
15
|
Seat change
|
13
|
New party
|
Popular vote
|
518,844
|
421,632
|
Percentage
|
4.66%
|
3.79%
|
Swing
|
2.07pp
|
New party
|
|
Districts shaded according to winners' vote strength |
|
General elections were held in Japan on 20 February 1936.[1] Rikken Minseitō emerged as the largest party in the House of Representatives, winning 205 of the 466 seats. Following the elections, an attempted coup took place on 26 February.
Electoral system
The 466 members of the House of Representatives were elected from multi-member constituencies with between three and five seats.[2]
Results
|
---|
Party | Votes | % | Seats | +/– |
---|
| Rikken Minseitō | 4,444,413 | 39.92 | 205 | +59 |
| Rikken Seiyūkai | 4,188,029 | 37.62 | 174 | –127 |
| Shōwakai | 531,772 | 4.78 | 20 | New |
| Shakai Taishūtō | 518,844 | 4.66 | 18 | +13 |
| Kokumin Dōmei | 421,632 | 3.79 | 15 | New |
| Others | 1,027,988 | 9.23 | 34 | +22 |
Total | 11,132,678 | 100.00 | 466 | 0 |
|
Valid votes | 11,132,678 | 98.96 | |
---|
Invalid/blank votes | 116,886 | 1.04 | |
---|
Total votes | 11,249,564 | 100.00 | |
---|
Registered voters/turnout | 14,304,546 | 78.64 | |
---|
Source: Voice Japan |
By prefecture
Notes
References
- ^ Thomas T Mackie & Richard Rose (1991) The International Almanac of Electoral History, Macmillan, p281
- ^ Mackie & Rose, p276