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Zenkō Suzuki

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Monarch
  
Showa

Succeeded by
  
Preceded by
  
Masayoshi Ito (Acting)

Name
  
Zenko Suzuki

Children
  
Shun\'ichi Suzuki


Born
  
11 January 1911Yamada, Iwate, Japan (
1911-01-11
)

Political party
  
Other politicalaffiliations
  
Liberal Party (1948–1950)Democratic Liberal Party (1950–1955)

Died
  
July 19, 2004, Tokyo, Japan

Education
  
Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology

Books
  
U.S.-Japanese Relations ; what Should the Future Hold?

Similar People
  
Masayoshi Ohira, Shun\'ichi Suzuki, Sosuke Uno, Ichiro Hatoyama, Ryutaro Hashimoto

THAILAND: Arrival of Japanese Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki


Zenkō Suzuki (鈴木 善幸, Suzuki Zenkō, 11 January 1911 – 19 July 2004) was a Japanese politician and the 70th Prime Minister of Japan who was in office from 17 July 1980 to 27 November 1982.

Contents

President Reagan at the Arrival Ceremony of Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki of Japan on May 7, 1981


Early life and education

Zenkō Suzuki httpswwwbiographycomimagecfillcssrgbdp

Suzuki was born in Yamada, Iwate, on 11 January 1911. He graduated from Tokyo University of Fisheries in 1935.

Career

Suzuki joined the Liberal Party in 1948, and helped merged it with another right of center party to establish the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in 1955. He was Minister of Health from 1965 to 1966, and Minister of Agriculture & Fisheries from 1976 to 1977.

Suzuki was appointed Prime Minister following the sudden death of Masayoshi Ōhira, who died of a heart attack during a general election campaign. The sympathy vote generated by Ohira's death resulted in a landslide for the ruling LDP, handing Suzuki the largest parliamentary majority any Prime Minister had enjoyed for many years. He chose not to run for reelection to the presidency of the LDP in 1982, and was succeeded by Yasuhiro Nakasone.

He served during a period of instability; cabinet members frequently changed, and parties were often split by fractional politics. His diplomatic skills allowed him to chair his party's executive council ten times, winning him support in his early career. Despite his foreign policy gaffes as prime minister, he later helped further foreign relations with the United States, during a 1988 summit with Ronald Reagan.

Death

Suzuki died at the International Medical Center of Japan in Tokyo of pneumonia on 19 July 2004. His son Shun'ichi Suzuki currently serves in the Diet.

Honours

From the corresponding article in the Japanese Wikipedia

  • Grand Cordon of the Order of the Chrysanthemum (July 2004; posthumous)
  • References

    Zenkō Suzuki Wikipedia


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