Nagano 3rd district
Legislative district of Japan
Nagano 3rd district (長野県第3区, Nagano-ken dai-sanku or 長野3区, Nagano sanku) is a single-member constituency of the House of Representatives, the lower house of the national Diet of Japan. It is located in central and eastern part of Nagano Prefecture and consists of Ueda City, Komoro City, Chikuma City, Saku City, Tōmi City, Minamisaku District, Kitasaku District, Chiisagata District and Hanishina District. As of December 2020, 400,529 eligible voters were registered in the district.[1]
Yousei Ide, a Liberal Democrat, has represented this district since December 2014.
List of members representing the district
Member
|
Party
|
Dates
|
Electoral history
|
Notes
|
Tsutomu Hata
|
|
New Frontier
|
October 21, 1996 – December 26, 1996
|
Redistricted from the former 2nd district and Re-elected in 1996. Re-elected in 2000. Re-elected in 2003. Re-elected in 2005. Re-elected in 2009. Retired.
|
Prime Minister of Japan (1994)
|
|
Sun
|
December 26, 1996 – January 23, 1998
|
|
Good Governance
|
January 23, 1998 – April 27, 1998
|
|
Democratic
|
April 27, 1998 – November 16, 2012
|
Yoshiyuki Terashima
|
|
Democratic
|
December 17, 2012 – November 21, 2014
|
Elected in 2012. Lost re-election.
|
Lost re-election in the Hokurikushin'etsu PR block.
|
Yousei Ide
|
|
Innovation
|
December 15, 2014 – March 27, 2016
|
Re-elected in 2014. Re-elected in 2017.
|
Elected in 2012 in the Hokurikushin'etsu PR block. Elected in 2024 in the Hokurikushin'etsu PR block.
|
|
Democratic
|
March 27, 2016 – October 3, 2017
|
|
Kibō no Tō
|
October 3, 2017 – May 7, 2018
|
|
Independent
|
May 7, 2018 – December 21, 2019
|
|
LDP
|
December 21, 2019 – October 9 2024
|
Takeshi Kōzu
|
|
CDP
|
Octoberber 29, 2024 – present
|
|
Election results
2024
2021
2017
2014
2012
2009
2005
2003
2000
1996
References
|
---|
| Hokkaidō (8 block seats, 12 district seats) | |
---|
Tōhoku (12 block seats, 21 district seats) | |
---|
Kita- (North) Kantō (19 block seats, 33 district seats) | |
---|
Minami- (South) Kantō (23 block seats, 36 district seats) | |
---|
Tokyo (19 block seats, 30 district seats) | |
---|
Hokuriku-Shin'etsu (10 block seats, 18 district seats) | |
---|
Tōkai (21 block seats, 33 district seats) | |
---|
Kinki (28 block seats, 45 district seats) | |
---|
Chūgoku (10 block seats, 17 district seats) | |
---|
Shikoku (6 block seats, 10 district seats) | |
---|
Kyūshū (20 block seats, 34 district seats) | |
---|
Districts eliminated in the 2002 reapportionments | |
---|
Districts eliminated in the 2013 reapportionments | |
---|
Districts eliminated in the 2017 reapportionments | |
---|
Districts eliminated in the 2022 reapportionments | |
---|
|
|