First Ikeda Cabinet, the Japanese majority government led by Hayato Ikeda in 1960
Second Ikeda Cabinet, the Japanese majority government led by Hayato Ikeda from 1960 to 1963
Third Ikeda Cabinet, the Japanese majority government led by Hayato Ikeda from 1963 to 1964
Topics referred to by the same term
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Ikeda Cabinet. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
IkedaCabinet may refer to: First IkedaCabinet, the Japanese majority government led by Hayato Ikeda in 1960 Second IkedaCabinet, the Japanese majority...
The Third IkedaCabinet is the 60th Cabinet of Japan headed by Hayato Ikeda from December 9, 1963, to November 9, 1964. A Cabinet reshuffle took place...
The First IkedaCabinet is the 58th Cabinet of Japan headed by Hayato Ikeda from July 19 to December 8, 1960. Janet Hunter, ed. (1984). Concise Dictionary...
Second IkedaCabinet was the 59th Cabinet of Japan. It was headed by Hayato Ikeda from December 8, 1960, to December 9, 1963. The first Cabinet reshuffle...
Hayato Ikeda (池田 勇人, Ikeda Hayato, 3 December 1899 – 13 August 1965) was a Japanese bureaucrat and later politician who served as prime minister of Japan...
Ministry, he became a protégé of future prime minister Hayato Ikeda. In 1953, at Ikeda's urging, Miyazawa ran for and won election to the Upper House of...
article lists successive Japanese cabinets, from first cabinet, First Itō Cabinet to current cabinet, Second Kishida Cabinet (Second Reshuffle). Politics portal...
as Director of the Science and Technology Agency during the Second IkedaCabinet from 1960 to 1961. He also served in the Japanese House of Representatives...
was not an option. Instead, the Ikedacabinet began planning a second international airport, making a formal cabinet decision on 16 November 1962. In...
The Second Kishi Cabinet is the 57th Cabinet of Japan headed by Nobusuke Kishi from June 12, 1958, to July 19, 1960. A Cabinet reshuffle took place on...
In the third IkedaCabinet, he was appointed as Minister for Foreign Affairs. He remained in this post under the 1st Eisaku Sato Cabinet. During this...
trade conflicts at the end of the reign of the Ikedacabinet, the LDP appointed Eisaku Sato as Ikeda's successor, who advocated “stable development” instead...
Ikeda Shigeaki (池田成彬, 15 August 1867 – 9 October 1950), also known as Seihin Ikeda, was a politician, cabinet minister and businessman in the Empire of...
Ikeda and Eisaku Satō and future Foreign Minister and Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsuo Okazaki were first elected in this election. The second cabinet of...
for the Liberal Democratic Party, and as Minister of Justice under Hayato Ikeda. Okinori Fujii was born on January 30, 1889, in Hiroshima, as the son of...
prime minister Hayato Ikeda's nephew, giving him a personal relationship with both key heads of the party. Under Ikeda'scabinet, Tanaka became chairman...
The current Cabinet of Japan, Second Kishida Cabinet (Second Reshuffle) has 15 male officers including Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and 5 female officers...
Satō as his successor. Although Fukuda remained locked out of the cabinet during the Ikeda years, his star began to rise again under Satō. Fukuda rose to...
The Uno Cabinet is the 75th Cabinet of Japan headed by Sōsuke Uno from June 3 to August 10, 1989. "第75代 宇野 宗佑|歴代内閣". Prime Minister's Official Residence...
played a role in the fall of Tojo cabinet in 1944. At the start of the Allied occupation of Japan, he served in the cabinet of Prince Naruhiko Higashikuni...
Tatsuo Ikeda (池田 龍雄, Ikeda Tatsuo, August 15, 1928 – 30 November 2020) was a Japanese avant-garde artist. An active figure in the Japanese postwar art...
she was re-elected in 1962, Kondo was offered a position in Hayato Ikeda'scabinet as the chairwoman of the Japanese Atomic Energy Commission and the...
chief cabinet secretary of Japan (内閣官房長官, Naikaku-kanbō-chōkan) is a member of the cabinet and is the leader and chief executive of the Cabinet Secretariat...
Foreign Affairs Minister in Japanese history. Kishida resigned from the Abe cabinet in 2017 in order to head the LDP's Policy Research Council. Kishida also...