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Mochizuki Keisuke : ウィキペディア英語版
Mochizuki Keisuke

was a statesman, politician and cabinet minister in Taishō and early Shōwa period Japan.
==Biography==
Mochizuki was born on Ōsakikamijima, an island in the Seto Inland Sea, now part of Hiroshima Prefecture, where his father was an entrepreneur and ship owner. He went to Tokyo when he was age 13 and studied the English language, returning at age 17 to assist in the family business. However, he soon became interested in politics and was affiliated with the early Liberal Party of Japan. He was elected to the lower house of the Diet of Japan in the 1898 General Election, and was subsequently reelected from the same district 13 times.
In his early career, Mochizuki spoke out strongly against factionalism in the Diet based on old clan-based affiliations. He later joined the ''Kenseitō'' political party, but was recruited as one of the founding members of the ''Rikken Seiyūkai'' by Itō Hirobumi in 1900. He rose to a high rank within the party, eventually serving as secretary-general during the administration of Prime Minister Hara Kei.
Mochizuki first joined the Cabinet under the Tanaka administration in 1927 as Minister of Communications. The following year, he was appointed Home Minister.〔Hunter, ''A Concise Dictionary of Modern Japanese History''. Page 280〕
During his term as Home Minister, renewed activity by underground Japan Communist Party in 1928 led to the March 15 Incident, in which police arrested more than 1,600 Communists and suspected Communists under the provisions of the Public Safety Preservation Law of 1925. The same year, he pushed through an amendment to the law, raising the maximum penalty from ten years to death.
Also while Home Minister in 1927, Mochizuki responded to a petition by pioneering Japanese feminist Shidzue Katō on women’s suffrage by telling her to go home to wash her baby’s diapers, as the place for women is in the home.〔Henderson, ''All Her Paths are Peace''. Page 59〕
However, Mochizuki broke with the ''Seiyūkai'' in 1934, forming the short-lived ''Showa-kai'' party in 1935. He returned to the cabinet as Minister of Communications from 1935-1936, and served as a Cabinet councilor during the Yonai administration in 1940.
Mochizuki died just before the start of the Pacific War. His birthplace in Ōsakikamijima has been preserved as a museum.〔() Ōsakikamijima home page〕 His grave is at the Tama Cemetery.〔() Tama Cemetery home page〕

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