Will Japan Move to Amend the Constitution?

Politics

Takahashi Masamitsu [Profile]

The ruling coalition’s upper house election victory gives Prime Minister Abe the numbers he needs to initiate a constitutional referendum. Political journalist Takahashi Masamitsu examines the hurdles the administration must clear to achieve a constitutional amendment.

An Amendment Timetable

The LDP, at the prime minister’s behest, should get to work on drafting an amendment bill during the fall Diet session. The forum for consultations with the opposition parties is likely to be the Commission on the Constitution in both houses of the Diet. To date, meetings of the commission have been little more than platforms for each party to assert their respective positions; the LDP is likely to seek more focused dialogue on specific items to advance the drafting process, identifying problem areas with the existing Constitution and coming up with approaches to redress them.

The next step will be to actually draft an amendment. Senior government officials note that their goal is to identify the items for revision during the special fall session. If this can be completed within the year, work on creating a draft can be launched during the next Diet session to be convened in January. As soon as a draft is completed, it can be submitted to the Diet and, with the approval of a two-thirds majority in both houses, proposed to the public in a national referendum.

According to Japanese law, the Diet is convened each January (for a term of 150 days plus one extension, if any) to deliberate on the budget for the fiscal year beginning in April and other matters. Because budget-related matters take precedence over other bills, non-budget items are usually not discussed until after the start of the new fiscal year. If the opposition voices strong resistance to certain bills, reaching a compromise can become a time-consuming process—often taking as long as two to three months. The security bills submitted during last year’s ordinary Diet session, for example, were stonewalled by the opposition and required a lengthy extension to be enacted.

To deal with the bills that could not be addressed during the ordinary session, special sessions—which may be extended twice—are generally convened in the fall. Given this reality, the earliest path to an amendment would be for a decision to be reached on which provisions to change during the fall and for work on a draft amendment to begin in earnest after April next year. Even if a draft is then submitted during the ordinary session, deliberations will certainly be highly contentious, so calling a Diet vote to propose a national referendum would, at the very least, require a very lengthy extension.

The national referendum law enacted during Abe’s first term stipulates that a plebiscite be held between 60 and 180 days following the Diet proposal, with a “yes” or “no” being asked separately for each revision. This means that a referendum is not likely to be held any sooner than late 2017. If the first two steps of determining what to change and then writing a revised draft are delayed, the timing of the referendum, correspondingly, will also be set back.

next: Hurdles to an Amendment

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Abe Shinzō LDP Komeito Constitutional amendment

Takahashi MasamitsuView article list

Chief commentary writer, Jiji Press. Born in Tokyo in 1961. Graduated from Keiō University and joined the political news department of Jiji Press, where he covered the Kōmeitō and the New Frontier Party, along with the Liberal Democratic Party faction headed by Obuchi Keizō. Served as political news editor, Kobe Bureau chief, Nagoya Branch manager, and managing editor before assuming his current position.

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