Osaka Metropolis Plan referendum, 2015

Osaka Metropolis Plan referendum
Sunday, 17 May 2015
Referendum on the implementation of the Osaka Metropolis plan
Results
Votes %
Yes 694,844 49.62%
No 705,585 50.38%
Valid votes 1,400,429 99.60%
Invalid or blank votes 5,655 0.4%
Total votes 1,406,084 100.00%
Registered voters/turnout 2,104,076 66.83%

A referendum on the implementation of the Osaka Metropolis plan was held in Osaka on 17 May 2015. In the event of a "yes" vote, the wards in Osaka City would be reorganized into special wards similar to those in Tokyo. The proposal was defeated by a slim margin of 10,741 votes (0.76%).[1]

Overview

Main article: Osaka Metropolis plan

Results

50.4% voted against the proposal.[2] 13 out of 24 Osaka wards voted "no".

Interest on the referendum was particularly high. The turnout of 66.83% is 5.91% higher than the turnout in the 2011 mayoral and gubernatorial election.[1]

Totals

Choice Votes %
Referendum failed No 705,585 50.38
Yes 694,844 49.62
Valid votes 1,400,429 99.60
Invalid or blank votes 5,655 0.40
Total votes 1,406,084 100.00
Registered voters and turnout 2,104,076 66.83
Source: Osaka City Electoral Commission

By wards

WardElectorateVotes forVotes againstFor(%)Against(%)Valid votesInvalid votesTotalTurnout(%)Proposed special ward
Kita-ku94,12836,01925,00159.0%41.0%61,02022861,24865.1%Kita-ku
Miyakojima-ku82,23730,13526,67153.0%47.0%56,80620557,01169.3%
Fukushima-ku56,79821,58617,26755.6%44.4%38,85313138,98468.6%
Konohana-ku54,47017,59718,87248.3%51.7%36,46913736,60667.2%Wangan-ku
Chūō-ku71,81924,33620,65754.1%45.9%44,99316445,15762.9%Chūō-ku
Nishi-ku70,28726,09419,16057.7%42.3%45,25416245,41664.6%
Minato-ku66,67321,41023,35147.8%52.2%44,76117244,93367.4%Wangan-ku
Taishō-ku55,15916,64621,21144.0%56.0%37,85713137,98868.9%
Tennōji-ku54,77418,32720,81546.8%53.2%39,14217439,31671.8%Chūō-ku
Naniwa-ku48,93613,56312,18952.7%47.3%25,7529825,85052.8%
Nishiyodogawa-ku75,82723,67028,33745.5%54.5%52,00717952,18668.8%Wangan-ku
Yodogawa-ku138,51548,56638,90355.5%44.5%87,46937987,84863.4%Kita-ku
Higashiyodogawa-ku136,35343,38841,34051.2%48.8%84,72833685,06462.4%
Higashinari-ku61,08520,68920,66750.0%50.0%41,35619441,55068.0%Higashi-ku
Ikuno-ku83,88625,39629,19046.5%53.5%54,58623654,82265.4%
Asahi-ku74,37123,14528,04845.2%54.8%51,19320951,40269.1%
Jōtō-ku132,09146,72845,78450.5%49.5%92,51233892,85070.3%
Tsurumi-ku85,85229,85929,75250.1%49.9%59,61122259,83369.7%
Abeno-ku85,35430,43432,44648.4%51.6%62,88025463,13474.0%Minami-ku
Suminoe-ku100,86733,18436,88047.4%52.6%70,06425070,31469.7%Minami-ku/Wangan-ku
Sumiyoshi-ku123,54938,62345,95045.7%54.3%84,57337384,94668.8%Minami-ku
Higashisumiyoshi-ku105,45634,07937,32247.7%52.3%71,40136371,76468.1%
Hirano-ku155,52746,07256,95944.7%55.3%103,031487103,51866.6%
Nishinari-ku90,06225,29828,81346.8%53.2%54,11123354,34460.3%Chūō-ku
Osaka City2,104,076694,844705,58549.62%50.38%1,400,4295,6551,406,08466.83%

Reactions to the result

After the defeat of the plan he had championed in the previous five years, Osaka Mayor Toru Hashimoto announced that he would retire from politics once his term expired in December 2015.[2][3] A major shakeup also occurred in Hashimoto's Japan Innovation Party, with the leader Kenji Eda and secretary-general Yorihisa Matsuno both announcing their resignation from their posts after the defeat.[1]

The referendum outcome was perceived as a blow to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who had supported the plan despite opposition from the Osaka branch of his Liberal Democratic Party, hoping that the Innovation Party would in turn support his efforts to amend the Constitution.[4][5]

References

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