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JAPAN
Sangiin (House of Councillors)
ELECTORAL SYSTEM

Compare data for parliamentary chambers in the Electoral system module

Parliament name (generic / translated) Kokkai / National Diet
Structure of parliament Bicameral
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
Electoral Law 15 April 1950
Last amendment: 15.06.2007
Mode of designation directly elected 242
Constituencies - 47 multi-member constituencies (between two and ten seats each), formed on a metropolitan or prefectural basis for a total of 146 seats
- one national constituency for the remaining 96 seats
At each election, 121 seats are renewed based on the following constituencies:
- 29 single-seat constituencies
- 18 multi-member constituencies (between two and five seats each) for 44 seats
- one national constituency for the remaining 48 seats
Candidates are not allowed to run in more than one type of constutuency at a time.
Voting system Mixed: - 73 chosen by simple majority system in geographical constituencies; successful candidates are decided in the order of the number of valid votes obtained on the basis of the comparative plurality. However, they should receive votes which is equal to or more than one-sixth of the quotient divided the total of valid ballots cast by the number of seats to be filled from the constituency concerned.
- 48 elected by proportional representation system, from a single constituency covering the whole country, in accordance with the d'Hondt method.
Vacancies arising between regular elections are filled by the "next-in-line" candidate of the same party on a list of candidates under the proportional representation system. In the case of the geographical constituency system, a vacancy occurring within three months after the election is filled by the candidates who obtained the statutory number of votes and did not become elected. A by-election is held in other cases or if a certain number of seats become vacant in the same constituency.
Voting is not compulsory.
Voter requirements - age: 20 years
- Japanese citizenship
Disqualifications:
- Persons recognised as a ward of the court by a family court;
- Persons sentenced to imprisonment or a more severe form of punishment and who have not completed their sentences;
- Persons sentenced to imprisonment or to a more severe form of punishment for an electoral offence, and who are given suspended sentences;
- Persons who, during their tenure as public office holders, have been convicted of bribery. This disqualification is valid during the term of the sentence and for five years thereafter.
CANDIDATES
Eligibility Qualified electors
- age: 30 years
- Japanese citizenship

Disqualifications:
- Persons recognised as a ward of the court by a family court;
- Persons sentenced to imprisonment or a more severe form of punishment and who have not completed their sentences;
- Persons sentenced to imprisonment or to a more severe form of punishment for an electoral offence, and who are given suspended sentences;
- Persons who, during their tenure as public office holders, have been convicted of bribery. This disqualification is valid during the term of the sentence and for ten years thereafter.
Incompatibilities - holders of official post in the Government or in local public entities. However, Prime Minister, Ministers of State, Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretaries, Aides to the Prime Minister, Vice-Ministers, Parliamentary Secretaries can stand for the House of Councillors (and a Councillor may, during his or her term of office, be appointed as such a post).
- executive or staff member of a public corporation
Candidacy requirements - deposit of 3,000,000 yen if running in geographical constituencies. Deposit is reimbursed if the candidate obtains at least one-eighth of the number resulting from the division of valid votes by seats in the constituency concerned
- for any poitical party or group, deposit of 6,000,000 yen multiplied by the number of candidates registered on its list under the proportional representation system. Deposit is reimbursed if the result obtained by doubling the number of those elected from a party or group list is at least equal to the number of candidates on this same list.

A political party has to meet one of the following conditions: (1) to have a minimum of five MPs in the Diet (i.e. both lower and upper houses), or (2) to have obtained a minimum of two per cent of votes either in the single-member-constituencies or in the proportional representation system in the most recent election.

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