Taizō Mikazuki, a former member of the House of Representatives from Shiga, was narrowly
elected governor in July 2014 with center-left support against ex-METI-bureaucrat
Takashi Koyari (supported by the center-right national-level ruling parties) to succeed governor
Yukiko Kada. In June 2018, he was
overwhelmingly reelected to a second term against one challenger, a communist. The
prefectural assembly has 44 members from 16 electoral districts, and is elected in unified local elections. As of July 2019, the assembly was composed by caucus as follows:
LDP 20 members, Team Shiga (
CDP,
DPP, former Kada supporters etc.) 14,
JCP 4, Sazanami Club (of independents) 3,
Kōmeitō 2, "independent"/non-attached 1. In the
National Diet, Shiga is represented by four directly elected members of the
House of Representatives and two (one per ordinary election) of the
House of Councillors. For the proportional representation segment of the lower house, the prefecture forms part of the
Kinki block. After the national elections of
2016,
2017 and
2019, the directly elected delegation to the Diet from Shiga consists of (as of August 1, 2019): • in the House of Representatives • for the
1st district in the west:
Toshitaka Ōoka, LDP, 3rd term, • for the
2nd district in the northeast:
Ken'ichirō Ueno, LDP, 4th term, • for the
3rd district on the southern shores of Lake Biwa:
Nobuhide Takemura, LDP, 3rd term, • for the
4th district in the southeast:
Hiroo Kotera, LDP, 1st term, • in the House of Councillors (
Shiga At-large district) • in the class of 2016 (term ends 2022): Takashi Koyari, LDP, 1st term, • in the class of 2019 (term ends 2025): Yukiko Kada, independent sitting with the
Hekisuikai caucus, 1st term. == Economy ==