Newsfrom Japan
Nov 7, 2025 18:01 (JST)
Sendai, Miyagi Pref., Nov. 7 (Jiji Press)–A high court in Japan ruled Friday that the July 20 House of Councillors election was held “in a state of unconstitutionality” in terms of vote-value disparities between prefectural constituencies, which reached a maximum of 3.13 times.
Still, Sendai High Court, in Miyagi Prefecture, northeastern Japan, turned down a demand that the results of the triennial election for the upper chamber of the Diet, or parliament, be invalidated.
This was the sixth ruling finding that the election took place in an unconstitutional state. It was ruled constitutional in four other verdicts.
Over the election, a total of 16 lawsuits have been filed with 14 high courts and high court branches by two groups of lawyers, who claim that the election was unconstitutional because it violated the principle of the equality in the value of votes and that the election outcomes therefore should be nullified.
The previous July 2022 Upper House election, in which the maximum vote-value disparity stood at 3.03 pct, has been ruled constitutional by the Supreme Court.
[Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.]