2024 Tokyo Gubernatorial Election

By:

February 12, 2026

2024 Tokyo Gubernatorial Election
2024 Tokyo Gubernatorial Election

Volume 24

Abstract: This paper discusses the 2024 Tokyo gubernatorial election in the context of past contests. It shows how this election manifested the trends since the 1990s: an increasing distrust of the existing political parties, including those created in that decade and the growing support for independent candidates. Such candidates follow their own line of thinking, free from party ties, and appeal to voters in ways that resonate with public skepticism toward party politics. The analysis highlights both continuity and change in Tokyo elections and underscores broader patterns in Japanese political development.

Keywords: Tokyo Gubernatorial Election, Tokyo Metropolitan Governor, Tokyo Metropolitan Government, Postwar Japanese Politics, Japan’s Party Politics

Read the full article here.

Share with a colleague:

Volume 24

About the author:

Junichi Hasegawa is a professor at Keio University. His recent publications include: ‘The plans for Tokyo Bay: the challenge of urban policy, 1950s–1990s’, Urban History 51 (2024); ‘Redeveloping Tokyo’s Meiji Jingu Gaien Area: The Metropolitan Government’s City Planning Runs Amok’, Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus 23 (2025); and ‘Transforming a Central Tokyo Park into a Cutting‐Edge Commercial Complex: Miyashita Park, Shibuya’, Urban Planning 11 (2026).

Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus is a peer-reviewed publication, providing critical analysis of the forces shaping the Asia-Pacific and the world.

    About the author:

    Junichi Hasegawa is a professor at Keio University. His recent publications include: ‘The plans for Tokyo Bay: the challenge of urban policy, 1950s–1990s’, Urban History 51 (2024); ‘Redeveloping Tokyo’s Meiji Jingu Gaien Area: The Metropolitan Government’s City Planning Runs Amok’, Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus 23 (2025); and ‘Transforming a Central Tokyo Park into a Cutting‐Edge Commercial Complex: Miyashita Park, Shibuya’, Urban Planning 11 (2026).