On public bodies Beginning in 1970, Sugiyama served in leadership positions on a number of public bodies, including:
In elected office Sugiyama was first elected to public office in 1979, serving thereafter as:
2000 presidential campaign Sugiyama ran for president in the
2000 election. During his tenure as Senate president, he had been a loyal supporter of outgoing president
Kuniwo Nakamura, and hoped to be next in line after Nakamura stepped down at the end of his second term due to
term limits. However, in July 2000, Nakamura announced his support for his vice president
Tommy Remengesau's presidential campaign. With this strong support, Rememgesau thus came in first in the primaries; out of 9,221 votes cast, he took almost 43% (4,000 votes), against just 22% (2,050) for second-place Sugiyama, with the rest distributed among minister of education
Billy Kuartei, senator
Santos Olikong, and
Angaur governor
Ben Roberto. The three other losers in the primaries threw their weight behind Sugiyama for the general elections, and he managed to significantly narrow the gap between himself and Remengesau. In the end, out of 10,718 votes (an 81% turnout), Sugiyama lost by a margin of 674 votes. ==Death==