Originally Posted by
Japan Times
A provision of the Public Offices Election Law that keeps Japanese citizens living abroad from voting for individual candidates in Diet elections is unconstitutional, the Supreme Court ruled Wednesday.
Under the law revised in 1998, eligible voters living overseas are allowed to vote under the proportional representation segment of national elections but cannot cast ballots for specific candidates in single-seat districts.
Before the revision, they were not allowed to vote at all in Diet elections.
Deeming the election law unconstitutional in both its original and revised forms, the ruling by the Grand Bench of the top court guarantees voters abroad the right to vote in districts elections starting with the next one.
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Kazuyoshi Kitaoka, 63, expressed joy over the decision, saying, "We believe that because of this ruling, democracy in Japan has taken a big step forward.
"We are Japanese and we will be Japanese till the day we die, praying for the development of our mother country," the L.A. resident of over 25 years said. "True, it may just be one vote, but our passionate feelings (toward Japan) drives us to want to cast that single vote."
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It is estimated there are more than 720,000 eligible voters living abroad, more than three times the number in the Tokushima No. 1 single-seat district.
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