House of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 24 April 1953,[1] electing half the seats in the House. The Yoshida faction of the Liberal Party won the most seats.

Results

PartyNationalConstituencySeats
Votes%SeatsVotes%SeatsNot upWonTotal
after
+/–
Liberal Party6,149,92722.75168,803,13131.4330474693+17
Left Socialist Party of Japan3,858,55214.2783,917,83713.9910221840New
Ryokufūkai3,301,01112.2182,096,1037.488181634–16
Right Socialist Party of Japan1,740,4236.4432,952,80310.547161026New
Kaishintō1,630,5076.0332,840,34510.1457815New
Japanese Communist Party293,8771.090264,7290.950101–3
Labourers and Farmers Party112,5350.420277,4420.990202–3
Liberal Party–Hatoyama110,8890.410522,5401.870202New
Other parties332,8981.230322,6741.151011–2
Independents9,504,22035.16156,013,36321.471472936+14
Total27,034,839100.005328,010,967100.00751221282500
Valid votes27,034,83990.9728,010,96794.25
Invalid/blank votes2,682,5849.031,707,9525.75
Total votes29,717,423100.0029,718,919100.00
Registered voters/turnout47,036,55463.1847,036,55463.18
Source: Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications,[1][2] National Diet

By constituency

Prefecture Total
seats
Seats won
LP LSPJ Ryokufūkai RSPJ Kaishintō Others Ind.
Aichi 3 1 1 1
Akita 1 1
Aomori 1 1
Chiba 2 1 1
Ehime 1 1
Fukui 1 1
Fukuoka 3 1 1 1
Fukushima 2 1 1
Gifu 1 1
Gunma 2 1 1
Hiroshima 2 1 1
Hokkaido 4 1 1 1 1
Hyōgo 3 1 1 1
Ibaraki 2 1 1
Ishikawa 1 1
Iwate 1 1
Kagawa 1 1
Kagoshima 2 2
Kanagawa 2 1 1
Kōchi 1 1
Kumamoto 2 1 1
Kyoto 2 1 1
Mie 1 1
Miyagi 1 1
Miyazaki 1 1
Nagano 2 1 1
Nagasaki 1 1
Nara 1 1
Niigata 2 1 1
Ōita 1 1
Okayama 2 1 1
Osaka 3 1 1 1
Saga 1 1
Saitama 2 1 1
Shiga 1 1
Shimane 1 1
Shizuoka 2 1 1
Tochigi 2 1 1
Tokushima 1 1
Tokyo 4 2 1 1
Tottori 1 1
Toyama 1 1
Wakayama 1 1
Yamagata 1 1
Yamaguchi 1 1
Yamanashi 1 1
National 53 16 8 8 3 3 15
Total 128 47 19 15 10 8 1 28

Aftermath

In the national constituency, a polling station in Sano, Tochigi accidentally had Japan Socialist Party candidate Takeshi Hirabayashi labelled as belonging to the Japanese Communist Party. As a result, the results in Sano were invalidated through an appeal decision of the Supreme Court on 24 September 1954. A re-vote was held on 17 October 1954 with proper labels, and Hirabayashi narrowly won a spot in the lower ranks of the national constituency results.[3]

References