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Tsuyoshi Yamaguchi (politician)

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Tsuyoshi Yamaguchi
山口 壯
Official portrait, 2019
Minister of the Environment
In office
4 October 2021 – 10 August 2022
Prime MinisterFumio Kishida
Preceded byShinjirō Koizumi
Succeeded byAkihiro Nishimura
Member of the House of Representatives
Assumed office
9 September 2005
Preceded bySaburo Komoto
ConstituencyKinki PR (2005–2009)
Hyōgo 12th (2009–present)
In office
25 June 2000 – 9 November 2003
Preceded bySaburo Komoto
Succeeded bySaburo Komoto
ConstituencyHyōgo 12th
Personal details
Born (1954-10-03) 3 October 1954 (age 70)
Aioi, Hyogo, Japan
Political partyLiberal Democratic
Children2
Alma materUniversity of Tokyo (Bachelor of Laws)
Johns Hopkins University (PhD in International Relations)

Tsuyoshi Yamaguchi (山口 壯, Yamaguchi Tsuyoshi, born October 3, 1954) is a Japanese politician of the Liberal Democratic Party and a member of the House of Representatives. He also served as Minister of the Environment from October 2021 to August 2022.

Biography

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Yamaguchi is a native of Aioi, Hyōgo. He is an only child who was raised by his father—a dentist—and his father's sister. He excelled as a tennis star in his student years and has been avid player since.

After graduating from the faculty of law of the University of Tokyo in 1978, he joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1979 and received a Ph. D from SAIS at Johns Hopkins University in the United States while an attache to the Embassy of Japan in Washington, D.C. When living in the U.S., he took up golf. Years prior to pursuing his political ambitions, Yamaguchi took a keen interest in politics and dreamed of serving his country as an elected official. He was an ardent admirer of Ronald Reagan, who was serving as U.S. President during Yamaguchi's student years in Washington, D.C.

Yamaguchi served in several bureaus of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) in Tokyo, as well as the Japan Defense Agency during the period 1982 to 1989. Between 1989 and 1995 he held three positions as First Secretary—in the Embassies of Japan in China, Pakistan, and the United Kingdom, respectively. In October 1995, he resigned from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Yamaguchi was elected to the House of Representatives for the first time in 2000. He has been elected 6 times, in 2000, 2005, 2009, 2012, 2014, and 2017. In September 2011, he became Parliamentary Senior Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs (a member of the Noda Cabinet). In October 2021 he became the Minister of the Environment as a member of the Kishida Cabinet.[1]

He studied for his master's degree at SAIS in Washington, D.C. beginning in the fall of 1980 through the spring of 1982 and completed his doctoral dissertation and received his PhD thereafter. His PhD adviser was Nathaniel B. Thayer, Yasuhiro Nakasone Professor and senior adviser to the Reischauer Center at SAIS. A strong interest of Yamaguchi's that figured prominently in his master's thesis and doctoral dissertation was the evolution of U.S.-Japanese relations in the modern era. The dissertation is titled "The Making of an Alliance: Japan’s Alliance Policy 1945-1952."

Family

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Yamaguchi is married and has two daughters.

References

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  1. ^ "自民 岸田総裁 環境相に山口壯氏 起用の意向固める".
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Political offices
Preceded by Minister of the Environment
2021–2022
Succeeded by