Rōdō Nōmintō
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The was a
political party A political party is an organization that coordinates candidates to compete in a particular area's elections. It is common for the members of a party to hold similar ideas about politics, and parties may promote specific political ideology, ...
in the
Empire of Japan The Empire of Japan, also known as the Japanese Empire or Imperial Japan, was the Japanese nation state that existed from the Meiji Restoration on January 3, 1868, until the Constitution of Japan took effect on May 3, 1947. From Japan–Kor ...
. It represented the left-wing sector of the legal proletarian movement at the time.Mackie, Vera C.
Creating Socialist Women in Japan: Gender, Labour and Activism, 1900–1937
'. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. p. 137
Oyama Ikuo was the chairman of the party.Barshay, Andrew E.
State and Intellectual in Imperial Japan: The Public Man in Crisis
'. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989. pp. 187–188
At the time the party was banned by the government in 1928, it was estimated to have around 90,000 members in 131 local organizations. The party was supported by the '' Hyōgikai''
trade union A trade union (British English) or labor union (American English), often simply referred to as a union, is an organization of workers whose purpose is to maintain or improve the conditions of their employment, such as attaining better wages ...
federation and the Japan Peasant Union.


Foundation

The ''Rōdōnōmintō'' was founded in March 1926 as a continuation of the
Farmer-Labour Party The was a short-lived socialist political party in Japan. The party was the first of the proletarian parties that emerged in the country after the enactment of the Universal Manhood Suffrage Law (普通選挙法, ''Futsū Senkyo Hō'') in 192 ...
(which had been founded in December 1925, but banned after only two hours of existence).Duus, Peter, John Whitney Hall, and Donald H. Shively.
The Cambridge History of Japan 6 The Twentieth Century
'. Cambridge u.a: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1988. p. 58
The party was founded by the '' Sodomei'' trade union centre, the Japan Labour Union Federation (a ''Sodomei'' splinter group), the Japan Peasant Union, the Seamen's Union and the Federation of Government Employees. The Japan Peasant Union leader Motojirō Sugiyama became the chairman of the party, Nagawa, Abe, Aso and Nishio were included in its Central Committee.Beckmann, George M., and Genji Okubo.
The Japanese Communist Party 1922–1945
'. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 1969. p. 100
Three members of the Central Committee of the party, Matsuda Kiichi, Ueda Onshi and Saiko Bankichi, were also leaders in the ''
Suiheisha The was a Japanese Human rights group, human rights organization founded on 3 March 1922 to advocate for the liberation of the Burakumin, a minority group subjected to discrimination. Launched in Kyoto in the liberal atmosphere of the Taishō D ...
'' movement.


Party platforms

The platform of the ''Rōdōnōmintō'' stated that the goal of the organization was the political, social and economic emancipation of the proletarian class, and through legal means work advocate
agrarian reform Land reform (also known as agrarian reform) involves the changing of laws, regulations, or customs regarding land ownership, land use, and land transfers. The reforms may be initiated by governments, by interested groups, or by revolution. Lan ...
and re-distribution of production. According to the party platform the established political parties represented the interests of the privileged classes, and that the ''Rōdōnōmintō'' sought their overthrow and reform of the parliamentary system. Other demands raised in the platform included universal suffrage (for all persons above 20 years of age), right to form
trade union A trade union (British English) or labor union (American English), often simply referred to as a union, is an organization of workers whose purpose is to maintain or improve the conditions of their employment, such as attaining better wages ...
s and to organize strikes,
collective bargaining Collective bargaining is a process of negotiation between employers and a group of employees aimed at agreements to regulate working salaries, working conditions, benefits, and other aspects of workers' compensation and labour rights, rights for ...
, minimum wages, 8-hour working day,
women's rights Women's rights are the rights and Entitlement (fair division), entitlements claimed for women and girls worldwide. They formed the basis for the women's rights movement in the 19th century and the feminist movements during the 20th and 21st c ...
, free education, increased legal rights to
tenant farmer A tenant farmer is a farmer or farmworker who resides and works on land owned by a landlord, while tenant farming is an agricultural production system in which landowners contribute their land and often a measure of operating capital and ma ...
s,
progressive taxation A progressive tax is a tax in which the tax rate increases as the taxable amount increases. The term ''progressive'' refers to the way the tax rate progresses from low to high, with the result that a taxpayer's average tax rate is less than the ...
and the democratization of the military leadership. At the time of its foundation, a party by-law was passed stating that only members of the constituent organizations of the party could acquire party membership. This was done to prevent communists and other left-wing elements to gain influence inside the organization. The anti-communist sectors wanted to block members of leftwing groups like ''Hyōgikai'', the Proletarian Youth League and the Society for Political Studies from joining the party. However, large sections of the party considered this by-law as impeding the formation of a single, unified party of the proletarian movement. The by-law was hotly debated within the party leadership. Oyama Ikuo and other younger militants of the Japan Peasant Union demanded that the by-law be scrapped. The result was a compromise, that membership was open for those individuals who were approved by the party branch in question.Beckmann, George M., and Genji Okubo.
The Japanese Communist Party 1922–1945
'. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 1969. pp. 101–102
The compromise did however not prevent splits in the party. The extreme right-wing faction inside the party (represented by section of older Japan Peasant Union leaders such as Okabe Kansuke and Hirano Rikizo) was the first dissident group to desert the party. In October 1926 they formed the Japan Farmers Party. On October 24, 1926, Sodomei and other trade unions withdrew from the party. The party leadership was now in the hands of Oyama Ikuo, Mizutani Chozaburo and Hososako Kanemitsu, and all restrictions on party membership were scrapped. ''Sodomei'' and other moderate sectors founded the
Social Democratic Party The name Social Democratic Party or Social Democrats has been used by many political parties in various countries around the world. Such parties are most commonly aligned to social democracy as their political ideology. Active parties Form ...
in December 1926.Wakukawa, Seiyei.
Japanese Tenant Movements
', in ''Far Eastern Survey'', Vol. 15, No. 3 (Feb. 13, 1946), pp. 40–44
In September 1926, the ''Rōdōnōmintō'' and ''Hyōgikai'' started a campaign to demand the introduction of five pieces of legislation; a
minimum wage A minimum wage is the lowest remuneration that employers can legally pay their employees—the price floor below which employees may not sell their labor. List of countries by minimum wage, Most countries had introduced minimum wage legislation b ...
law, an
8-hour working day The eight-hour day movement (also known as the 40-hour week movement or the short-time movement) was a social movement to regulate the length of a working day, preventing excesses and abuses of working time. The modern movement originated in ...
law, a health insurance law, a working women's protection law and a law for
unemployment benefits Unemployment, according to the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), is the proportion of people above a specified age (usually 15) not being in paid employment or self-employment but currently available for work d ...
.Mackie, Vera C.
Creating Socialist Women in Japan: Gender, Labour and Activism, 1900–1937
'. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. p. 115
On December 12, 1926, the ''Rōdōnōmintō'' held its first convention. The convention elected Oyama Ikuo as party chairman and Hososako general secretary.Beckmann, George M., and Genji Okubo.
The Japanese Communist Party 1922–1945
'. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 1969. pp. 103–104
The revolutionary left was also divided within own ranks. After the disbanding of the first
Japanese Communist Party The is a communist party in Japan. Founded in 1922, it is the oldest political party in the country. It has 250,000 members as of January 2024, making it one of the largest non-governing communist parties in the world. The party is chaired ...
in 1924, leftwing cadres had joined the Labour-Farmer Party. One sector (the Fukumoto group) wanted to reconstitute the Communist Party and concentrated their work on underground organizing, whilst
Sakai Toshihiko was a Japanese socialist. He advocated opposition to the Russo-Japanese War, founded the Heiminsha and published the newspaper ''Heimin Shimbun''. He formed the Japan Socialist Party and the Japanese Communist Party, and became the first gene ...
,
Yamakawa Kikue was a Japanese essayist, activist, and socialist feminist who contributed to the development of feminism in modern Japan. Born into a highly-educated family of the former samurai class, Yamakawa graduated from the private women's college Jos ...
,
Yamakawa Hitoshi was a Japanese socialist intellectual, activist, and theorist. He was a central figure in the early Socialist thought in Imperial Japan, Japanese socialist movement and a co-founder of the first Japanese Communist Party in 1922. After breaking w ...
and their sympathizers focused on building the legal Labour-Farmer Party. By the end of 1926, the Fukomoto group dominated both the reconstituted Communist Party and the Labour-Farmer Party, holding key strategic positions inside the latter. In March 1927, the
Communist International The Communist International, abbreviated as Comintern and also known as the Third International, was a political international which existed from 1919 to 1943 and advocated world communism. Emerging from the collapse of the Second Internationa ...
intervened. A meeting was held in
Moscow Moscow is the Capital city, capital and List of cities and towns in Russia by population, largest city of Russia, standing on the Moskva (river), Moskva River in Central Russia. It has a population estimated at over 13 million residents with ...
, in which
Bukharin Nikolai Ivanovich Bukharin (; rus, Николай Иванович Бухарин, p=nʲɪkɐˈlaj ɪˈvanəvʲɪdʑ bʊˈxarʲɪn; – 15 March 1938) was a Russian revolutionary, Soviet politician, and Marxist theorist. A prominent Bolshevik ...
, M. N. Roy,
J. T. Murphy John Thomas Murphy (9 December 1888 – 13 May 1965) was a British trade union organiser and Communist functionary. Murphy is best remembered as a leader of the communist labour movement in the United Kingdom from the middle 1920s until his resig ...
and
Béla Kun Béla Kun (, born Béla Kohn; 20 February 1886 – 29 August 1938) was a Hungarian communist revolutionary and politician who in 1919 governed the Hungarian Soviet Republic. After attending Franz Joseph University at Kolozsvár (today Cluj-N ...
participated, along with Fukumoto and other Japanese communist leaders. Both Yamakawa and Fukumoto were condemned in the thesis issued by the Communist International. Yamakawa was denounced as a " liquidationist", while Fukumoto was branded as "sectarian". The Communist Party of Japan was instructed to organize itself as a vanguard party, working with and within mass organizations like the Labour-Farmer Party. In December 1927, the Yamakawa group began publishing the monthly journal ''Rōnō'', borrowing the name of the Labour-Farmer Party for their factional organ. In the midst of financial crisis that hit Japan in the spring of 1927, the party stepped up its propaganda work, launching a campaign to call for early elections. The Kantō Women's League, a women's organization connected to the party, was founded on July 3, 1927. The Kantō Women's League was dissolved in March 1928, after the party had issued a directive against the existence of a separate organization for women. The change of position regarding the women's organization was a side-effect of the factional battle inside the party. Regarding the Chinese question, the party opposed the Japanese government policy and ran a "Hands off China" campaign. The party was supportive of the leftist
Wuhan Wuhan; is the capital of Hubei, China. With a population of over eleven million, it is the most populous city in Hubei and the List of cities in China by population, eighth-most-populous city in China. It is also one of the nine National cent ...
government. The party aided the foundation of the Taiwan Peasant Union and supported its struggles against the agricultural policies of the Japanese governor-general on the island.


Electoral activity

The party launched 108 candidates in the 1927 prefectural elections, out of whom 13 were elected (nine from rural areas, four from urban areas). The bulk of the votes for the party came from areas where its Japan Peasant Union was more active; Kagawa, Niigata, Akita and Hyōgo. The combined vote of the candidates of the party stood at 119,169.Banno, Junji.
The Political Economy of Japanese Society
'. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997. p. 238
Ahead of the 1928 national Diet elections the Labour-Farmer Party issued a list of radical demands, calling for the abolition of all forms of discrimination of subject races and reductions of the size of the armed forces.Colegrove, Kenneth.
Labor Parties in Japan
', in ''The American Political Science Review'', Vol. 23, No. 2 (May, 1929), pp. 329–363
Slogans such as "Establish a Worker-Peasant Government" and "Long live the dictatorship of the proletariat" were raised in the election campaign. However, there was considerable government interference against the electoral campaigns of the Labour-Farmer Party. Electoral meetings were interrupted by police and election campaign workers were often arbitrarily arrested. Night after night, police forces interrupted the campaign speeches of Oyama Ikuo. His campaign headquarters in the
Kagawa Prefecture is a Prefectures of Japan, prefecture of Japan located on the island of Shikoku. Kagawa Prefecture has a population of 949,358 (as of 2020) and is the List of Japanese prefectures by area, smallest prefecture by geographic area at . Kagawa Pr ...
constituency (where he stood as candidate, facing the incumbent finance minister) were raided by police. Amongst the candidates of the party were eleven communists. Kyuichi Tokuda, who later became the general secretary of the Communist Party, stood as a candidate of the party. Another communist, the trade union organizer Kenzo Yamamoto, was a Labour-Farmer Party candidate in
Hokkaido is the list of islands of Japan by area, second-largest island of Japan and comprises the largest and northernmost prefectures of Japan, prefecture, making up its own list of regions of Japan, region. The Tsugaru Strait separates Hokkaidō fr ...
. All in all the party supported 40 candidates in the elections, whom together mustered 181,141 votes (1.9% of the nationwide vote). Banno, however, states that the combined vote of the 40 Labour-Farmer Party candidates was 193,047. According to Banno's account, 77% of the votes for the party came from rural areas (the party had launched 32 rural and 8 urban candidates).Banno, Junji.
The Political Economy of Japanese Society
'. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997. p. 240
Two of the candidates of the party were elected,Beckmann, George M., and Genji Okubo.
The Japanese Communist Party 1922–1945
'. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 1969. p. 151
Colegrove, Kenneth.
The Japanese General Election of 1928
', in ''The American Political Science Review'', Vol. 22, No. 2 (May, 1928), pp. 401–407
Yamamoto Senji and Mizutani Chozaburo.Tsuzuki, Chushichi.
The Pursuit of Power in Modern Japan 1825 – 1995
'. Oxford .a. Oxford Univ. Press, 2000. pp. 258–259
Following the election the three proletarian parties in the assembly (the Labour-Farmer Party, the Japan Labour-Farmer Party and the Social Democratic Party) managed to form a joint parliamentary committee, in spite of their political contradictions.


Dissolution

With the 15 March incident, a wave of repression was directed against the leftwing in Japan. Around 1,600 persons were arrested and accused of being communist activists. The Labour-Farmer Party was banned by the Home Ministry on April 11, 1928, after accusations arose of links to the communists. ''Hyōgikai'' was banned on the same day. After the Labour-Farmer Party had been banned, the government attempted to expel its representatives from the
Lower House A lower house is the lower chamber of a bicameral legislature, where the other chamber is the upper house. Although styled as "below" the upper house, in many legislatures worldwide, the lower house has come to wield more power or otherwise e ...
of the
Diet of Japan , transcription_name = ''Kokkai'' , legislature = 215th Session of the National Diet , coa_pic = Flag of Japan.svg , house_type = Bicameral , houses = , foundation=29 November 1890(), leader1_type ...
. However they lacked any legal basis to do so, and the two Labour-Farmer Party continued in their parliamentary functions. Yamamoto Senji, who was elected as a Labour-Farmer Party candidate for Kyoto at the first general election under
universal suffrage Universal suffrage or universal franchise ensures the right to vote for as many people bound by a government's laws as possible, as supported by the " one person, one vote" principle. For many, the term universal suffrage assumes the exclusion ...
held in February 1928, spoke in the Imperial Diet on February 8 1929, inquiring about the torture and illegal detention of prisoners by the police, who had boasted of being the " Amakasu of Showa". He was preparing his speech for the Diet in February, but was killed by a right-wing assassin at an inn in the Kanda district of Tokyo on February 29, on the same day as he had presented testified in the Diet regarding torture of prisoners. There would be several different attempts by leftists to recreate a party representing the Labour-Farmer Party legacy. Immediately after the disbanding of the Labour-Farmer Party, the Communist Party instructed its cadres to rebuild the party. The goal to achieve unification with the Japan Labour-Farmer Party was retained. A reorganization committee was formed (named the 'Committee for the Rebuilding of the Labour-Farmer Party and Preparation for New Party'). Oyama Ikou served as the chairman of the committee and Hososako as the general secretary. The committee was quickly banned by the government, but continued to function illegally. In July 1928 the ''Rōnō'' faction broke away from the committee and founded the Proletarian Masses Party. In December 1928 the Proletarian Masses Party merged with the
Japan Labour-Farmer Party The was a socialist political party in Japan between December 1926 and December 1928. During its existence, it occupied a centrist position in the divided socialist movement. Foundation The Japan Labour-Farmer Party was one of several proleta ...
, forming the Japan Masses Party.
International Labour Office The International Labour Organization (ILO) is a United Nations agency whose mandate is to advance social and economic justice by setting international labour standards. Founded in October 1919 under the League of Nations, it is one of the firs ...
.
Industrial Labour in Japan
'. Japanese economic history, 1930–1960, v. 5. New York: Routledge, 2000. p. 114
Beckmann, George M., and Genji Okubo.
The Japanese Communist Party 1922–1945
'. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 1969. pp. 158–159
In the same month the Oyama Ikuo group held a refoundation conference of the Labour-Farmer Party, but the party was again banned swiftly. Scalapino, Robert A.
The Japanese Communist Movement, 1920–1966
'. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967. p. 36
In January 1929 Mizutani Chozaburo denounced his former comraders of the Labour-Farmer Party as 'too communistic', thus ending the continuity of the Labour-Farmer Party parliamentary faction. In November 1929 Oyama Ikuo and his followers founded the New Labour-Farmer Party. After having formed this party a final break between Oyama Ikuo and the communists occurred, and the communists began labelling him as a 'traitor'.


References

{{Authority control 1926 establishments in Japan Defunct political parties in Japan Labour parties Political parties disestablished in 1928 Political parties established in 1926 Political parties in the Empire of Japan Socialist parties in Japan