*Perilous Times and Decaying Morality
First gay candidate runs in Japan
*
Justin McCurry in Tokyo
Friday May 25, 2007
The Guardian
Kanako Otsuji, Japan's first openly gay politician, is to run in July's
national elections in what she says is a challenge to official ignorance
of the country's "hidden" minority groups.
Officials yesterday confirmed that the Democratic party, Japan's largest
opposition party, had endorsed Ms Otsuji, 32, to run in the July 22
election for the upper house of parliament.
In 2003 Ms Otsuji, running as an independent, became the youngest ever
candidate to win a seat on the Osaka prefectural assembly at the age of
28, one of only seven women on the 110-seat legislature.
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She successfully campaigned to change a local law to allow same-sex
couples to rent public housing in Osaka, which had previously been
available only to married couples. Same-sex unions are not recognised by
Japanese law.
Midway through her four-year term Ms Otsuji decided to go public about
her sexual orientation with the publication of her autobiography, Coming
Out: A Journey to Find Myself. Though she did not attempt to hide her
sexual orientation during the Osaka election campaign, her aides
persuaded her not to mention it for fear that it would drive away voters.
Ms Otsuji said prime minister Shinzo Abe's vision of a "Beautiful Japan"
ignored the diversity of Japanese society. "There is a tendency to put
forward one set of values," she said. "But the reality is becoming more
diverse. Japanese society is not engaging with the wide range of people
living in diverse ways, in terms of nationality, race, sex, age and
disabilities."