Zenjirō Horikiri (堀切善次郎, Horikiri Zenjirō, 2 September 1884 – 1 November 1979) was a Japanese official who served as Minister for Home Affairs under Prime Minister Kijūrō Shidehara from 1945 to 1946. His brother, Zenbei Horikiri was also a politician and prominent member of the Rikken Seiyūkai political party.
In 1932, in the administration of Prime Minister Saitō Makoto, Horikiri served as Director-General of the Cabinet Legislation Bureau, and in 1933 was appointed Chief Cabinet Secretary. The same year, he was appointed to a seat in the upper house of the Diet of Japan.
Following the surrender of Japan, Horikiri was appointed Home Minister under the Shidehara administration. During his tenure, he sponsored election reform laws to lower the minimum voting age to twenty, and to enable were enacted on women’s suffrage and eligibility for seats on in the Diet. The laws were passed in the Diet in December 1945, despite reservations by some members that this action would lend support to extremist (particularly leftist) elements.[2] As a result of the election law reforms, Koreans and Taiwanese resident in Japan lost their rights to vote in Japanese elections, as Horikiri judged that they had lost their Japanese nationality with Japan’s acceptance of the Potsdam Declaration, and would thenceforth need to be treated as resident foreigners.[3]
At the end of his term of office, Horikiri was placed on purged list of those banned from holding government office.
Following the end of the occupation, Horikiri served from 1954 to 1969 as the Chairman of the Tokyo Metropolitan Public Safety Commission, which supervises the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department.
References
Kornicki, Peter F. Meiji Japan. Routledge (1998). ISBN0415156181
Kono,Masaru. Japan’s Postwar Party Politics. Princeton University Press. (1997) ISBN0691015961
Hunter, Janet. A Concise Dictionary of Modern Japanese History . University of California Press (1994). ISBN0520045572
Watt, Lori (2010). When Empire Comes Home: Repatriation and Reintegration in Postwar Japan. Harvard University Press. ISBN978-0674055988.