Goro Yoshimura

Goro Yoshimura
吉村 午良
Governor of Nagano Prefecture[2]
In office
October 26, 1980[1] – October 25, 2000[3]
Preceded byGon'ichirō Nishizawa
Succeeded byYasuo Tanaka
Personal details
Born(1926-02-13)February 13, 1926
Nagaoka, Niigata, Japan
DiedMay, 2007
Nagano, Nagano
Alma materTokyo University

Goro Yoshimura (吉村 午良, Yoshimura Gorou) (born February 13, 1926) was a Japanese politician, and the former governor of Nagano Prefecture, in central Japan. Yoshimura was a graduate of the law faculty at the University of Tokyo.[4] Upon graduation, he worked in the Nagano Prefectural Government Office.[5] In 1971, he became deputy governor,[6] and was elevated to governor in 1980 when the governor at the time, Gon'ichirō Nishizawa, suffered a cerebral hemorrhage. Yoshimura served five full 4-year terms, until October 26, 2000.[7] Yoshimura retired from politics in 2000.

Yoshimura served as one of the four Vice Presidents of the Nagano Olympic Organizing Committee from 1991 and the Nagano Paralympic Organizing Committee President, when the committees was founded, until its final meetings in February 1999.[8] At the June 15, 1991 97th IOC session in Birmingham, United Kingdom, Yoshimura was part of the Nagano Olympic Bid committee, where he spoke followed by Hironoshin Furuhashi, president of the Japanese Olympic Committee.[9] In 1998, Yoshimura received the Silver Badge of the Olympic Order.[10]

  1. ^ "長野県の歴代知事 (trans. Governors of Nagano)". Nagano Prefecture. Nagano Prefecture. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  2. ^ "長野県の歴代知事 (trans. Governors of Nagano)". Nagano Prefecture. Nagano Prefecture. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  3. ^ "歴代長野市長 (trans. Mayors of Nagano City)". Nagano City. Nagano City Official Website. Retrieved 8 June 2019.
  4. ^ Yawata, Kazuo. "困った変人知事と知事選挙をめぐる珍事の数々[Transl.: The troubled governors...]". Agora. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  5. ^ Yawata, Kazuo. "困った変人知事と知事選挙をめぐる珍事の数々[Transl.: The troubled governors...]". Agora. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  6. ^ Yawata, Kazuo. "困った変人知事と知事選挙をめぐる珍事の数々[Transl.: The troubled governors...]". Agora. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  7. ^ "歴代長野市長 (trans. Mayors of Nagano City)". Nagano City. Nagano City Official Website. Retrieved 8 June 2019.
  8. ^ Hanazawa 1999, p. 46
  9. ^ Hanazawa 1999, p. 34
  10. ^ "JOCについて、オリンピック・オーダー [Transl.: About the JOC, the Olympic Order]". Japanese Olympic Committee. Retrieved 29 June 2019.