Eriko Yamatani
Eriko Yamatani | |
---|---|
山谷 えり子 | |
Chairperson of the National Public Safety Commission Minister of State for Disaster Management | |
In office September 3, 2014 – October 7, 2015 | |
Prime Minister | Shinzō Abe |
Preceded by | Keiji Furuya |
Succeeded by | Tarō Kōno |
Minister in charge of the Abduction Issue Minister in charge of Building National Resilience | |
In office September 3, 2014 – October 7, 2015 | |
Prime Minister | Shinzō Abe |
Preceded by | Keiji Furuya |
Succeeded by | Katsunobu Katō |
Minister in charge of Ocean Policy and Territorial Issues | |
In office September 3, 2014 – October 7, 2015 | |
Prime Minister | Shinzō Abe |
Preceded by | Ichita Yamamoto |
Succeeded by | Aiko Shimajiri |
Special Adviser to the Prime Minister for Education Reform | |
In office September 26, 2006 – September 26, 2007 | |
Prime Minister | Shinzō Abe |
Member of the House of Councillors | |
Assumed office July 2004 | |
Member of the House of Representatives | |
In office June 2000 – November 2003 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Musashino, Tokyo, Japan | 19 September 1950
Political party | Liberal Democratic Party |
Alma mater | University of the Sacred Heart |
Occupation | Politician |
Eriko Yamatani (山谷 えり子, Yamatani Eriko, born September 19, 1950) is a Japanese politician. Her name in official documents is Eriko Ogawa (小川恵里子, Ogawa Eriko).[1]
Life and career
[edit]Born in Musashino, Tokyo, Japan. Her father was a Sankei Shimbun newspaper reporter. She spent her childhood in Fukui city, where her wealthy family ran the geisha ryokan Beniya at Awara Onsen. Later her father was defeated in the general election, and, heavily in debt, the Yamatani family left Fukui for Tokyo. She graduated from the University of the Sacred Heart (a Catholic university in Tokyo) with the Bachelor of Letters degree in March 1973. She worked in the United States for a publishing company. She became the editor-in-chief of Sankei Living Shimbun in 1985 and became known as an essayist and television personality.
In 1989 Yamatani ran for a seat in the House of Councillors as a Democratic Socialist Party candidate, but was defeated.
In June 2000, she was elected to the Diet of Japan on the Democratic Party ticket as a proportional representative. She left the party in 2002 to join the New Conservative Party.[2] Though she had planned to run for the seat representing the Tokyo 3rd district in 2003, the emergence of Hirotaka Ishihara, son of Governor Shintaro Ishihara, forced her to run from the 4th district, where she was defeated. She then returned to the Diet as a proportional representative of the Liberal Democratic Party in 2004.
Yamatani is a vocal opponent of "gender-free education" and of sex education in home economics textbooks and other parts of the school curriculum.
Affiliated to the openly revisionist organization Nippon Kaigi,[3] she is also a supporter of Japan's territorial claims and has called for special legislation to restrict land sales to foreigners on Tsushima Island and to implement measures to boost its local economy without having to depend heavily on South Korean tourists. Koreans own about 0.007 percent of the land on Tsushima.[4]
Yamatani has also made anti-LGBT statements, ridiculing the rights of transgender persons from using the bathroom of their chosen gender and lamenting situations where transgender athletes are stealing medals from cisgender athletes.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ 山谷 えり子(やまたに えりこ)本名 小川 惠里子(おがわ えりこ) (in Japanese). House of Councillors official website. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- ^ The Japan Times Kumagai to form 'new party' with NCP and DPJ defectors December 25 2002 Retrieved on August 7, 2012
- ^ "Abe’s reshuffle promotes right-wingers" - Korea Joongang Daily - 2014/09/05
- ^ Kaneko, Maya, (Kyodo News) "Tsushima's S. Koreans: guests or guerrillas?", Japan Times, March 5, 2010, p. 3.
- ^ A series of discriminatory remarks at the Liberal Democratic Assembly over the LGBT bill(in Japanese), Mainichi Shimbun, May 21, 2021
External links
[edit]- "Eriko Yamatani's Lecture on June 14, 2005 at Mitaka Marketing Plaza" [1] reported by CGS, International Christian University
- 1950 births
- Living people
- People from Fukui Prefecture
- People from Musashino, Tokyo
- Japanese expatriates in the United States
- Japanese journalists
- Japanese essayists
- Japanese women television personalities
- Women members of the House of Representatives (Japan)
- Members of the House of Representatives (Japan)
- Women members of the House of Councillors (Japan)
- Members of the House of Councillors (Japan)
- North Korean abductions of Japanese citizens
- Female critics of feminism
- Japanese anti-communists
- Japanese Roman Catholics
- Democratic Socialist Party (Japan) politicians
- Democratic Party of Japan politicians
- Members of Nippon Kaigi
- New Conservative Party (Japan) politicians
- Liberal Democratic Party (Japan) politicians
- University of the Sacred Heart (Japan) alumni
- 21st-century Japanese politicians
- 21st-century Japanese women politicians