Minoru Terada

Minoru Terada
寺田 稔
Official portrait, 2021
Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications
In office
10 August 2022 – 20 November 2022
Prime MinisterFumio Kishida
Preceded byYasushi Kaneko
Succeeded byTakeaki Matsumoto
House of Representatives
Assumed office
16 December 2012
Preceded byMitsuo Mitani
ConstituencyHiroshima 5th (2012–2024)
Chūgoku PR (2024–present)
In office
27 April 2004 – 21 July 2009
Preceded byYukihiko Ikeda
Succeeded byMitsuo Mitani
ConstituencyHiroshima 5th
Personal details
Born (1958-01-24) 24 January 1958 (age 66)
Hiroshima, Japan
Political partyLiberal Democratic
Alma materUniversity of Tokyo
Harvard University

Minoru Terada (Chinese: 寺田 稔; pinyin: Si Tianren, Terada Minoru, born January 24, 1958) is a Japanese politician who served as the Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications from August until November 2022. A member of the Liberal Democratic Party, he also serves in the House of Representatives and was Special Advisor to Prime Minister Fumio Kishida from December 2021 to August 2022.

A native of Hiroshima, Hiroshima and graduate of the University of Tokyo (Alma mater, Faculty of Law), Terada joined the Ministry of Finance in 1980, attending Harvard University in United States while in the ministry, in 1982.

Terada's wife Keiko is a granddaughter of Hayato Ikeda, former Prime minister of Japan. He was elected for the first time in 2004, when he left the ministry after the death of his uncle and former Foreign Minister Yukihiko Ikeda.

Terada also served as Secretary at the Embassy of Japan in Washington, D.C., Senior Vice Minister of Cabinet Office, and Senior Vice Minister for Reconstruction[1]

Affiliated to the openly revisionist lobby Nippon Kaigi, which advocates a return to militarism in Japan,[2] Terada is in favor of allowing collective self-defense.[3]

On November 20, 2022, Terada was sacked from his position as the Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications after a magazine alleging him of misusing political funds, prompting calls for his resignation from opposition parties who saw him as unfit to supervise election-related laws.[4]

  1. ^ Profile on LDP website - retrieved Nov 19, 2014
  2. ^ Nippon Kaigi website
  3. ^ Asahi Shimbun Hiroshima, June 18, 2014
  4. ^ "Japan PM sacks scandal-hit internal affairs minister amid pressure". Kyodo News. 20 November 2022. Retrieved 20 November 2022.