in 2007 in 2008 Kunio Hatoyama was born in
Tokyo in 1949. He was a son of
Yasuko Hatoyama and
Iichirō Hatoyama, a bureaucrat who later became a third-generation politician, and grandson of
Ichirō Hatoyama, who became the President of the
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and
Prime Minister of Japan between 1954 and 1956. His brother
Yukio Hatoyama, also a politician and leader of the rival
Democratic Party of Japan, became the country's Prime Minister in September 2009 following a landslide victory in the August 2009 election. His maternal grandfather was
Shōjirō Ishibashi, founder of
Bridgestone. Hatoyama attended the Faculty of Law at the
University of Tokyo and graduated with a degree in political science. He wanted to get into politics right away and became an aide to Prime Minister
Kakuei Tanaka. He ran for the
House of Representatives in 1976 as a member of the
New Liberal Club and entered the LDP after winning. In 1993, he left the LDP and became a conservative independent, saying he wanted to form a new party to oppose the LDP. He was briefly
Minister of Education, Science, Sports and Culture in the Cabinet of Prime Minister
Tsutomu Hata. In 1994, he helped form the now-defunct
New Frontier Party, which he left in 1996 to form the
Democratic Party of Japan with his brother,
Yukio Hatoyama, and became the Vice Leader of the opposition. Divisions between the brothers eventually led him to leave the DPJ in 1999, and he re-joined the LDP in 2000 after running unsuccessfully for the seat of the Governor of Tokyo. He joined the
Shinzō Abe cabinet as Justice Minister in August 2007, and maintained his post through the September inauguration of the cabinet of
Yasuo Fukuda. Serial killer
Tsutomu Miyazaki was executed during his tenure. After the execution, he was called "Grim Reaper" by the
Asahi Shimbun, which made him angry. Subsequently, in the Cabinet of Prime Minister
Tarō Asō, appointed on 24 September 2008, Hatoyama was moved to the post of Minister of Internal Affairs and Communications. In a dispute with Asō over a possible replacement of
Japan Post Holdings president
Yoshifumi Nishikawa Hatoyama resigned on 12 June 2009. ==Personal life==