Communist Party's vision to change Japan
KIMITOSHI MORIHARA, vice-head of the Japanese Communist Party's international
department, took part in the Asia Pacific Solidarity Conference in Sydney
over Easter. He outlined the JCP's analysis of Japanese capitalism and
its tasks. Following is an abridged version of his presentation.
Japan's nation building after World War II has been abnormal, based
on subservience to the US -- politically, economically and militarily --
and gave the highest priority to the interests of Japan's big business.
It is a failed course.
Last year, the government imposed a 9 trillion yen (US$70 billion) burden
on the Japanese people by increasing the consumption tax and revising the
pension and medical insurance systems. These measures froze personal spending
and prolonged the recession.
Support for the JCP has been increasing, spreading to the traditional
base of the conservatives.
Electoral gains
The JCP has made successive advances in recent elections. In the 1996 House
of Representatives election, it won 7.26 million votes, 13.08% of the total,
or 40% of votes cast for the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, and increased
its seats from 15 to 26.
In the July 1997 Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly election, the JCP won 21.3%
of the total votes, or 70% of the LDP's. We doubled our seats to 26 and
become the second biggest party in the assembly.
In local elections, the JCP has surpassed the LDP by securing the highest
number of local assembly seats, totalling 4073 as at April 1. In March,
the seventh Communist mayor in Japan was elected. The number of local governments
where the JCP is the ruling party reached 124.
The JCP was founded in 1922 and was illegal for the first 33 years,
during which time many of its leaders were persecuted and imprisoned for
opposition to militarism. Currently, it has 370,000 members and 2.3 million
readers for its official daily newspaper, Akahata.
Two contradictions
A fundamental contradiction is the government's excessive priority given
to big business and the US. Japan has gone further on this than other developed
capitalist countries.
Average working hours in 1995, for example, were 400 hours more than
Germany and 300 hours more than France. Karoshi is a Japanese expression
for deaths from overwork, which are common. This symbolises the extreme
degree of capital accumulation.
The basic cause of Japan's prolonged economic crisis is that while a
small number of big businesses accumulate super-profits, the people's living
standard is the lowest among developed countries.
The second contradiction arises from Japan's more than 50 years of subservience
to the US, under the Japan-US military alliance. Under the military treaty,
Japan is to support US military bases for raids on east Asia and the Pacific.
There is no US forces stationed in Japan to defend Japan, though the Japanese
government maintains such bases with Japan's money.
The aircraft-carrier Independence, whose home port is at Yokosuka
and whose Marines are stationed in Okinawa, carries expeditionary forces
whose operational areas stretch from the African east coast to the Indian
Ocean and the Pacific. The US Army units and Marines in Okinawa are training
Indonesian forces which are now suppressing their own people.
The Japanese and US governments are now implementing new “guidelines”
which will expand the military treaty's geographical coverage to all of
Asia and the Pacific, even worldwide, such that the US can mobilise Japanese
military and economic forces to assist its military interventions around
the world.
Goals
We work towards the establishment of a democratic government which seeks
to resolve these problems, within the framework of capitalism, by early
next century. We will cooperate with other forces if they share the following
objectives:
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a Japan in which the extraordinary position of “capitalism without rules”
is remedied, and big business is made to fulfil its social responsibility,
and in the course of economic development, priority is given to the people's
living conditions;
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an independent, non-nuclear, non-aligned and neutral Japan which breaks
with the Japan-US Security Treaty, and which contributes to world peace
by developing genuine relations of friendship with the US and Asian countries;
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a Japan which checks any moves to adversely revise the constitution and
to revive complete militarism; a Japan in which democracy will flourish,
and people are respected as human beings.
We do not aim to establish a one-party government. Yet we do not assume
either that our coalition partners will be social democratic parties.
In postwar Japan, social democratic parties have failed as a political
trend. They monopolised control of trade unions while failing to build
their own organisations. They supported interference by the former Soviet
Union and other countries in Japan's progressive movements. Tempted by
a call “to join the government”, they abandoned in an unprincipled way
their public pledges.
In 1980, in face of the Socialist Party's complete degeneration to the
right, we called for cooperation between the JCP and progressive non-party
forces, on the basis of common political goals.
A key achievement has been the formation of the National Forum for Peace,
Democracy and Progressive Unity on the basis of the three objectives for
progress. It is also prepared to cooperate with organisations and individuals
on the simple basis of common opposition to a bad government. This forum
has been making remarkable advances.
What sort of party?
The JCP's vision is that a revolution can be achieved based on a consensus
of the majority of the people. The expression “the people are sovereign”
captures this central principle. The JCP carried out this spirit even under
the brutal
tenno (emperor) system in pre-war days. Risking their
lives, members stood up in opposition to Japanese imperialism's invasion
of Asia, in defence of the rights of the people and for democracy.
The JCP specified this spirit in its 1976 “Manifesto on Freedom and
Democracy”, which gives an outline of its perspective for social progress
in Japan: democratic coalition government, democratic revolution and socialist
revolution.
It also specifies the connection between each of these stages and the
people's will. It says, “The route for social progress, as well as when
and how far along this route we should move, are questions to be determined
by the will of the people, the sovereign, and by the choice the people
express in elections”.
We are convinced that capitalism will be overcome in time. In Japan,
the situation is now maturing for democratic reform. In achieving these
tasks and as the consensus of the majority moves on and is ready for new
advances, the new tasks will get onto history's agenda.
We are of the view that the Soviet Union had been unable to reach even
the transition to socialism. In fact, it was completely derailed from the
path to socialism.
I would like to emphasise the JCP's traditional independence. We don't
follow big powers blindly or copy other countries' experiences unconditionally.
We think for ourselves and find answers by analysing Japan's realities.
We have established these lines, activities and the foundation of finance
through a severe fight against interference by Soviet great power chauvinism.
The JCP and Asia
In our last party congress in September, we resolved to strengthen our
relations with forces in Asia and the Pacific, a region of growing importance,
politically and economically.
Our priorities of activities in the area included:
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“Denuclearisation” and substantial arms reduction. By making clear that
Japan is non-nuclear, we hope to expand the nuclear free zones in Asia.
East Asia is the only area where military spending is increasing. Japan's
current military budget is the fourth largest in the world, but our aim
is to take a lead in cutting military spending substantially.
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We aim to secede from the Japan-US military alliance and to take a neutral,
non-aligned stand. We intend joining the Conference of Heads of State and
Government of Non-aligned Countries after we establish a democratic coalition
government. We reject any hegemonic policy and support peaceful settlement
of disputes.
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Making clear domestically and internationally the past mistakes of Japanese
militarism. We will seek to resolve all outstanding cases of postwar reparations.
Finally, we have a policy to democratise Japan's economic cooperation with
Asia. The bias of Japan's economic policy toward Asian countries should
be corrected for the benefit of the people of these countries. We are proposing
economic cooperation based on a respect for economic sovereignty of each
country, real equality and mutual benefit.