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Japan's lower house passes imperial law revision after 1-day debate

Created at 10 Jul · 6:00 AM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

Japan's House of Representatives approved a bill to revise the Imperial House Law, aiming to address the declining number of imperial family members. The legislation permits the adoption of males from former branch families and allows female members to retain their status after marriage.

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Key Numbers

15minimum age for adopted males
11former imperial branch families
1947year of current Imperial House Law
July 17end of current parliamentary session

Who's Involved

House of Representatives
Japan's lower legislative chamber that passed the bill
Liberal Democratic Party
Ruling party that aims to pass the legislation
Japan Innovation Party
Junior coalition ally aiming to pass the legislation
Sanae Takaichi
Prime Minister whose government submitted the bill
House of Councillors
Upper legislative chamber where the bill will next be debated
Japan's lower house passes imperial law revision after 1-day debate

↳ Why This Matters

The revision addresses a critical demographic challenge within Japan's imperial family, ensuring a sufficient number of eligible successors and members to maintain imperial traditions. It represents a significant legislative effort to adapt the monarchy to modern societal changes while navigating complex succession rules.

Key facts

  • Japan's House of Representatives passed a bill to revise the Imperial House Law.
  • The legislation permits the adoption of males aged 15 or older from 11 former imperial branch families.
  • Female imperial family members will be allowed to retain their imperial status after marrying commoners.
  • The bill excludes adopted members from ascending the throne but allows their male descendants eligibility.
  • The ruling coalition aims for the bill's enactment during the current parliamentary session ending July 17.

Japan's House of Representatives has passed a bill to revise the Imperial House Law, marking a significant step towards addressing the declining number of imperial family members. The legislation, debated and passed within a single day, introduces key changes to the decades-old system.

The bill's primary provisions include allowing imperial family members to adopt males aged 15 or older who are descended from emperors through the male line, specifically from 11 former branch families. Additionally, female members of the imperial family will be permitted to retain their status even after marrying commoners. However, adopted members themselves will be barred from ascending the Chrysanthemum Throne, though their male descendants will be eligible.

The legislation, submitted by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's government, does not address the contentious issue of female or maternal-line emperors, an idea that has public support. Current law restricts succession to males with an emperor on their father's side and requires women to relinquish their imperial status upon marriage.

The ruling Liberal Democratic Party and its coalition partner, the Japan Innovation Party, now aim to secure passage of the bill in the House of Councillors before the current parliamentary session concludes on July 17. The ruling bloc's substantial majority in the lower chamber facilitated the bill's swift approval, overcoming previous parliamentary gridlock caused by opposition parties' concerns over the ruling bloc's legislative approach.

Frequently asked questions

The revision aims to address the declining number of imperial family members by allowing adoptions and enabling female members to retain their status after marriage.

Males aged 15 or older who are descended from emperors through the male line in 11 former branch families can be adopted.

No, adopted members themselves cannot become emperor, but their male descendants will be eligible to ascend the throne.

No, the bill does not mention or include provisions for female or maternal-line emperors.

What Happens Next

01The bill will be debated and voted on in the House of Councillors.
02The ruling coalition aims for the bill's enactment during the current parliamentary session.
03Prime Minister Takaichi is scheduled for one-on-one debate sessions with opposition leaders on Wednesday afternoon.

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Cadence

How It Developed

Japan's House of Representatives passed a bill to revise the Imperial House Law.
The bill allows imperial family members to adopt males aged 15 or older from former branch families.
Female imperial family members will be allowed to retain their status after marrying commoners.
The ruling coalition aims to pass the legislation through the House of Councillors.
The bill does not address the possibility of female or maternal-line emperors.

Sources

T1
Japan's lower house passes imperial law revision after 1-day debateNikkei Asia

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