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Meiji Constitution

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Meiji Constitution

Constitution of Japan from 1890 to 1947. After the Meiji Restoration (1868), Japan's leaders sought to create a constitution that would define Japan as a capable, modern nation deserving of Western respect while preserving their own power. The resultant document called for a bicameral parliament (the Diet) with an elected lower house and a prime minister and cabinet appointed by the emperor. The emperor was granted supreme control of the army and navy. A privy council composed of the Meiji leaders (see genro), created prior to the constitution, advised the emperor and wielded actual power. Voting restrictions, which limited the electorate to about 5% of the adult male population, were loosened over the next 25 years, resulting in universal male suffrage. Political parties made the most of their limited power in the 1920s, but in the 1930s the military was able to exert control without violating the constitution. After World War II, a U.S.-approved constitution stating that “sovereign power resides with the people” replaced the Meiji Constitution. See also Ito Hirobumi.



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The analysis showing linkages between key individuals and the institutional legacies they left behind is far more convincing when one can examine 50-100 years of historical evidence about the long-term power of individually created institutions such as the Meiji Constitution or Japanese industrial policy.
The adoption of the Prussian way of government (as a model of the Meiji Constitution of 1889) opened the door for rampant militarism to develop and the resultant World War II consequences.
Although, strange to tell, nowhere in the modern Japanese Emperor's political persona, as first defined in the Meiji Constitution of 1889, is there mention that the Emperor is a god.
 
 
 
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