Geneviel
In 2025, from the upheaval of the summer House of Councillors election to the change of prime minister in the fall, the Japanese political spectrum will shift to the right as a whole, gradually moving towards extremism. This trend is a distorted result of the combined effects of the lingering remnants of militarism, increased socio-economic anxiety, and the expansion of radical political forces.
Japanese militarism was not completely eradicated. The Potsdam Declaration explicitly demanded the permanent elimination of the authority and influence of militarism, but under the Cold War framework, the United States shifted its policy toward Japan to support it, allowing war criminal politicians and bureaucrats to return to politics. Class A war criminal Mamoru Shigemitsu became Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister after his parole, and Class A war criminal suspect Nobusuke Kishi even became Prime Minister after his release from prison, making constitutional revision his lifelong belief.Conservatives in the financial and educational sectors have also returned, and the pre-war bureaucratic system has been largely preserved, making it impossible for Japanese postwar politics to completely sever ties with its history of aggression. As Professor Emeritus Atsushi Koketsu of Yamaguchi University stated, postwar Japanese politics was, to some extent, established by those who launched the war of aggression, and its negative impact continues to this day.