Uno Cabinet
Cabinet of Japan (1989)
-
- Japan Socialist Party
- Kōmeitō
- Democratic Socialist Party
- Japanese Communist Party
(Reshuffle)
The Uno Cabinet is the 75th Cabinet of Japan headed by Sōsuke Uno from June 3 to August 10, 1989.[1]
Cabinet
Portfolio | Minister | Special mission etc. | Note |
---|---|---|---|
Prime Minister | Sōsuke Uno | ||
Minister of Justice | Kazuo Tanikawa | ||
Minister for Foreign Affairs | Hiroshi Mitsuzuka | ||
Minister of Finance | Tatsuo Murayama | ||
Minister of Education | Takeo Nishioka | ||
Minister of Health | Junichiro Koizumi | ||
Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries | Hisao Horinouchi | ||
Minister of International Trade and Industry | Seiroku Kajiyama | ||
Minister of Transport | Shinjirō Yamamura | In charge of New Tokyo International Airport issues | |
Minister of Posts | Kanezō Muraoka | ||
Minister of Labor | Mitsuo Horiuchi | ||
Minister of Construction | Takeshi Noda | In charge of Land Measures | |
Minister of Home Affairs Chair of the National Public Safety Commission | Shigenobu Sakano | ||
Chief Cabinet Secretary | Masajuro Shiokawa | ||
Director of the Management and Coordination Agency | Yukihiko Ikeda | ||
Director of the Hokkaido Regional Development Agency Director of the Okinawa Regional Development Agency | Kichio Inoue | ||
Director of the Defense Agency | Taku Yamasaki | ||
Director of the Economic Planning Agency | Michio Ochi | ||
Director of the Science and Technology Agency | Kishirō Nakamura | Chair of the Atomic Energy Commission | |
Director of the Environment Agency | Tatsuo Yamazaki | for Global Environmental issues | |
Director of the National Land Agency | Eiji Nonaka | for the International Garden and Greenery Exposition for Research and College Town | |
Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary | Takamori Makino | for Political Affairs | |
Nobuo Ishihara | for General Affairs Previous office: Administrative Vice-Minister of Home Affairs | ||
Director-General of the Cabinet Legislation Bureau | Osamu Mimura | Previous office: Chief of the Tokyo High Public Prosecutors Office | |
Source:[1] |
Notes
References
- ^ a b "第75代 宇野 宗佑|歴代内閣". Prime Minister's Official Residence. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
- v
- t
- e
(1885–1947)
- Itō I
- Kuroda
- Sanjō caretaker
- Yamagata I
- Matsukata I
- Itō II
- Matsukata II
- Itō III
- Ōkuma I
- Yamagata II
- Itō IV
- Katsura I
- Saionji I
- Katsura II
- Saionji II
- Katsura III
- Yamamoto I
- Ōkuma II
- Terauchi
- Hara
- Takahashi
- Katō To.
- Yamamoto II
- Kiyoura
- Katō Ta.
- Wakatsuki I
- Tanaka G.
- Hamaguchi
- Wakatsuki II
- Inukai
- Saitō
- Okada
- Hirota
- Hayashi
- Konoe I
- Hiranuma
- N. Abe
- Yonai
- Konoe II
- Konoe III
- Tōjō
- Koiso
- K. Suzuki
- Higashikuni
- Shidehara
- Yoshida I
(1947–present)
- Katayama
- Ashida
- Yoshida II
- Yoshida III (R1) (R2) (R3)
- Yoshida IV
- Yoshida V
- I. Hatoyama I
- I. Hatoyama II
- I. Hatoyama III
- Ishibashi
- Kishi I (R)
- Kishi II (R)
- Ikeda I
- Ikeda II (R1) (R2) (R3)
- Ikeda III (R)
- Satō I (R1) (R2) (R3)
- Satō II (R1) (R2)
- Satō III (R)
- K. Tanaka I
- K. Tanaka II (R1) (R2)
- Miki (R)
- T. Fukuda (R)
- Ōhira I
- Ōhira II
- Z. Suzuki (R)
- Nakasone I
- Nakasone II (R1) (R2)
- Nakasone III
- Takeshita (R)
- Uno
- Kaifu I
- Kaifu II (R)
- Miyazawa (R)
- Hosokawa
- Hata
- Murayama (R)
- Hashimoto I
- Hashimoto II (R)
- Obuchi (R1) (R2)
- Mori I
- Mori II (R Before 2001 CGR) (R After 2001 CGR)
- Koizumi I (R1) (R2)
- Koizumi II (R)
- Koizumi III (R)
- S. Abe I (R)
- Y. Fukuda (R)
- Asō
- Y. Hatoyama
- Kan (R1) (R2)
- Noda (R1) (R2) (R3)
- S. Abe II (R)
- S. Abe III (R1) (R2) (R3)
- S. Abe IV (R1) (R2)
- Suga
- Kishida I
- Kishida II
- R1
- R2
Current cabinet