Factional Competition for the Party Endorsement: The Case of Japan's Liberal Democratic Party
- 1 April 1996
- journal article
- other
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in British Journal of Political Science
- Vol. 26 (2) , 259-269
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007123400000454
Abstract
This Note explores the candidate-endorsement process in the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) of Japan during its period of hegemony (1955–90). Even in parties without an enduring factional structure such as the LDP, nominations are often troublesome – witness, for example, the reselection controversy in Britain's Labour party at the end of the 1970s or the perennially damaging fights in American primary elections. Moreover, it is easy to understand why nomination politics is so consistently problematic: the gist of the problem is simply that different groups within a party may differ as to who should receive the party endorsement in a given district (or, in list systems, who should get the safe spots on the list). Group A naturally wants its candidate(s) endorsed (there may be more than one in multi-member districts), but so do groups B, C and D. The resulting interaction between groups can be what a game theorist would call a co-ordination, or Battle of the Sexes, game.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Anatomy of a split: The Liberal Democrats of JapanElectoral Studies, 1995
- Seat Bonuses under the Single Nontransferable Vote System: Evidence from Japan and TaiwanComparative Politics, 1994
- Japan Election DataPublished by University of Michigan Library ,1992
- The Relationship between Divisive Primaries and General Election OutcomesAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1987
- The Liberal Democratic Party Revisited: Continuity and Change in the Party's Structure and PerformanceThe Journal of Japanese Studies, 1984
- How the Conservatives Rule JapanVerfassung in Recht und Übersee, 1970