The current governor of Ishikawa is
Hiroshi Hase who was first elected in 2022. He defeated six time incumbent
Masanori Tanimoto. Prior to his defeat, Tanimoto was one of two governors who were in their sixth term nationwide, the other being
Masaru Hashimoto of Ibaraki. Hase is only the fifth governor of Ishikawa since 1947 when prefectural governors became elected offices, as Tanimoto had held the governorship for twenty eight years, first coming to office in 1994, succeeding
Yōichi Nakanishi, who had served from 1963 until his death in 1994. The has 43 members and is elected in unified local elections (last round: 2011) in 15
SNTV electoral districts – six single-member, five two-member, one three-member, two four-member districts and the Kanazawa City district that elects 16 members. As of February 26, 2014, the
LDP prefectural assembly caucus has 25 members and no other group has more than four members. In the
National Diet, Ishikawa is represented by three directly elected members of the
House of Representatives and two (one per election) of the
House of Councillors. Additional members from the prefecture may be elected in the proportional representation segments of both houses: the
Hokuriku-Shin'etsu proportional representation block in the lower house, the proportional election to the upper house is nationwide. After the Diet elections of 2010, 2012 and 2013, the five directly elected members from Ishikawa districts are all Liberal Democrats, namely: • in the House of Representatives • for the
1st district that covers Kanazawa City:
Hiroshi Hase, LDP, 5th term, • for the
2nd district that consists of Southern parts of Ishikawa and had been the district of former LDP president
Yoshirō Mori until 2012:
Hajime Sasaki, LDP, 1st term, • for the
3rd district in the North:
Shigeo Kitamura, LDP, 3rd term, • in the House of Councillors • in the class of
2010 (term ends 2016):
Naoki Okada, LDP, 2nd term, and • in the class of
2013 (term ends 2019):
Shūji Yamada, LDP, 1st term who was able to defeat
Democratic incumbent and former defense minister
Yasuo Ichikawa by a huge margin in 2013. == See also ==