- Source: Okinawa Prefectural Assembly
The Okinawa Prefectural Assembly (沖縄県議会, Okinawa-kengikai) is the prefectural parliament of Okinawa.
Its 48 members are elected every four years in 14 districts by single non-transferable vote (SNTV). 13 electoral districts are multi-member district, one district is a single-member district where SNTV becomes equivalent to First-past-the-post voting.
The assembly is responsible for enacting and amending prefectural ordinances, approving the budget and voting on important administrative appointments made by the governor including the vice-governors.
Unlike most mainland prefectural assemblies (Hokkaidō is another exception) the Okinawa Prefectural Assembly was not in existence continuously since 1878. After the Battle of Okinawa, the United States military governed the prefecture. The civilian branch of the military government was the United States Civil Administration of the Ryukyu Islands; a Legislature of the Government of the Ryukyu Islands (立法院) was created in 1952. After Okinawa's return to the mainland in 1972, the Prefectural Assembly was restored. Since then, it had been one of three prefectures in the country that do not elect their assemblies in unified local elections (last round: 2011), the other two being Ibaraki and Tokyo (In 2011, another three prefectures hit by the Great East Japan earthquake postponed their elections).
Current composition
As of 2017, the assembly was composed as follows:
Electoral districts
Most electoral districts in Okinawa correspond to current cities or former counties (the counties, abolished as administrative unit in 1921, had initially by definition served as electoral districts for prefectural assemblies in the Empire).
List of presidents and vice presidents
= Presidents
== Vice presidents
=References
External links
Okinawa Prefectural Assembly (in Japanese), Resolutions related to the U.S. military presence in English
Okinawa Prefectural Electoral Commission (in Japanese)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Prefektur di Jepang
- Prefektur Mie
- Pemilihan umum di Jepang
- Okinawa Prefectural Assembly
- Okinawa Prefecture
- Denny Tamaki
- Ginowan, Okinawa
- Okinawa Social Mass Party
- Battle of Okinawa
- Takeshi Onaga
- 1995 Okinawa rape incident
- Miyakojima, Okinawa
- Kin, Okinawa