
Inequality in the Halls of Power: Legal Expert Miura Mari Examines Japan’s New Parity Law
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Japan is at long last taking steps to address its dismal record of gender equality in politics. The country currently ranks 165 out of 193 nations in the proportion of female members in its national parliament. In May 2018 the Diet passed a nonbinding act that urges political parties to field equal numbers of female and male candidates. The legislation, initiated by a female citizen’s group, has even drawn comparisons with parity legislation enacted in France. Sophia University political science professor Miura Mari, who was involved in the legislative process, considers the impact the law will have in bringing gender equality to the Japanese political sphere.
Women sit in the visitor’s gallery of the Diet on May 16, 2018, to witness the passing of a law promoting candidate gender equality. (© Jiji)
INTERVIEWER What impact has the law had in the runup to the unified local elections in April and the House of Councillors election in July, the first major contests since the Diet passed the act?
MIURA MARI One of the most tangible effects has been increased coverage of female candidates in the media. News outlets have focused a lot of attention on female legislators as well as new candidates as they watch to see the law’s impact on local races. This undoubtably has encouraged many women who were sitting on the fence to run for office.
The media has also scrutinized the efforts of different parties to boost female candidates, putting pressure on them to live up to the law’s call for parity. Opposition parties have made the greatest headway in this regard so far. The Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan aims for women to make up 40 percent of the proportional representation candidates they field in the upper-house election. The Communist Party of Japan and the Democratic Party for the People are aiming for 50 percent and 30 percent, respectively, of all the candidates they field to be women. The Liberal Democratic Party has noticed this and is taking a serious look at its game plan going forward.
Whether opposition parties actually increase their presence in the upper house by fielding more female candidates will be one area to watch. Women currently hold 20.7 percent of the seats in the House of Councillors, compared to just 10.1 percent in the lower house. Half of upper-house seats come up for election every three years, and all eyes are on how far the ratio can be extended from six years ago.
INTERVIEWER Many parties have seemed to struggle to find suitable female candidates. Why is this?
MIURA Parties do not make public the process by which they select candidates, making it difficult for women with few connections to figure out how they can run for election. Many female candidates run in municipal elections as independents. However, to have a chance of winning a Diet seat, a candidate must be endorsed by a major party, and it is typically only those who have some contacts within the party that get tapped to run.
Parties are largely male-dominated and leadership rarely strays from their masculine networks, hampering their ability to get to know potential female candidates. Parties need to recognize this situation and introduce reforms that enable them to recruit a broader diversity of candidates.
Sexual Harassment in Politics
INTERVIEWER The gender equality act calls for measures to address issues that hamper women’s participation in politics. Many see the ongoing problem of sexual harassment as a major barrier discouraging women.
MIURA The prevailing view in Japan is that politics is a boys-only club, and there are even some who would like nothing more than to see women excluded entirely. Men of this opinion don’t see Japan’s low ratio of female Diet members as an issue. In their view, there are already too many women in politics, and they resent the growing media coverage of female candidates. Such chauvinistic thinking creates a toxic environment and has no place in Japanese politics. The time has come to introduce concrete measures to prevent the harassment and personal attacks that so many female politicians are made to endure.
To increase female participation, parties and legislative bodies must step up and firmly take responsibility for ending sexual harassment and gender-based discrimination. From the standpoint of recruitment, parties cannot turn a blind eye to such abhorrent behavior if they honestly expect women to join their ranks. Leadership must establish clear codes of conduct and discipline party members whose behavior crosses the line.
A 2014 incident involving Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly member Shiomura Ayaka illustrates the situation. When presenting questions about the need for policies to support women’s concerns, including pregnancy and birth, Shiomura was met with catcalls like “Why don’t you get married first?” from male assembly members. Although the incident was a blatant case of sexual harassment, it didn’t result in disciplinary actions and ended with the culprits merely proffering empty apologies. The episode demonstrates the need for legislative bodies to establish punitive measures to hold men accountable for misogynistic behavior.
Efforts to prevent harassment must also extend to social media. Authorities need to work closely with platform operators to create guidelines to prevent hate speech and other abuse aimed at women.
INTERVIWER Japanese mass media coverage of female legislators suffers from an obvious gender bias. What do you think should be done to address this?
MIURA The media holds female legislators to a different standard, which places them at a disadvantage. Outlets pay little attention to political prowess and instead prefer to focus on superficial topics like physical appearance, fashion sense, and personal life. For better or worse, though, the small number of female Diet members means that newcomers are thrust into the spotlight. However, the attention can be a double-edged sword, boosting or dashing legislative careers. A political gaffe is bad enough, but if a woman is caught up in a sexual scandal she is crucified. What we must do as a society is replace our worn-out stereotypes of women with a new, diverse image of female leadership. To achieve this, we need more women in politics.
Too Little Competition
INTERVIEWER How would you characterize the role female politicians played over the three decades of the Heisei era?
MIURA The 1989 upper-house election and its “Madonna boom” was a major milestone that nearly tripled the proportion of women in the body, to around 18 percent. In the 1990s, the collapse of the “1955 system” defined by the uninterrupted rule of the Liberal Democratic Party and the electoral reforms of 1994 heralded a new age for female lawmakers.
From the late 1990s into the early 2000s, female Diet members helped spearhead a slew of new legislation aimed at women, including the 1993 Part-Time Workers Act, 1995 Childcare and Family Care Leave Act, 1999 Basic Act for Gender Equal Society, and 2001 Domestic Violence Prevention Act.
In the 2005 general election, Prime Minister Koizumi Jun’ichirō set out to increase female LDP members in office, and the party has fielded more or less the same number of female candidates ever since. Then, in 2009, the Democratic Party of Japan snatched power from the LDP with the help of an influx of women into the party, including the “Ozawa girls” invited to run by then chief election strategist for the DPJ Ozawa Ichirō. However, the momentum eventually dwindled, and overall, the ratio of female legislators has only marginally increased. Women still have relatively little influence inside parties or with voters and those looking to run for office still have to rely on male leaders to get ahead. In the 1990s, cross-party cooperation among female lawmakers made the aforementioned acts targeting women possible, but in the 2000s this momentum was lost.
INTERVIEWER Perceived gender roles are a barrier to women’s participation in politics in much of the world. What aspects are specific to the situation in Japan?
MIURA In many political systems, the ebb and flow of power among parties creates opportunities for women to run for office. In Japan, though, regime change has been scarce, with the LDP steering the nation for most of the postwar era. There is also a strong tendency for incumbents to be automatically endorsed. Until these warhorses retire, women will be left with few opportunities to run for office.
The law promoting candidate gender equality is just the first step in opening the door to increasing the number of female legislators. Japan will need to consider gender quotas for elections if it hopes to make real progress in improving the situation.
INTERVIEWER Why is it vital that Japan work to increase the number of female lawmakers?
MIURA The most obvious problem is that women make up half of voters but only around 10 percent of lawmakers. Governments thrive when there is healthy and open dialogue among legislators and their constituents. However, in Japan’s male-dominated political system, topics important to women are largely ignored. Female representatives are in a better position to address social issues like sexual abuse than their male counterparts, who are unable to relate and all too often push women’s issues to the side. This creates a less equal society by disenfranchising women. Increasing the number of female legislators will give women a greater voice in society.