Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "小池百合子" in Chinese language version.
Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike is a remarkable woman and a politician; unfortunately, she also has a remarkable prejudice against Japan’s Korean residents and other foreigners that make some question her fitness as a leader on the international stage. In such acts as tacitly denying that thousands of Koreans were slaughtered by Japanese mobs in 1923, and demanding opposition to voting rights for Japan’s resident foreigners—-she has exhibited a streak of xenophobia and revisionism that is troubling.(...)She has promoted herself as an environmental activist and "tolerant conservative" but in her political career has served as an executive member of the political arm of extreme right-wing Shinto cult and political lobby, Nippon Kaigi. Newsweek Japan, in last week’s cover story, dubbed her a “pushy hard-headed nationalist.”
小池大臣は二〇〇三年一一月に毎日新聞が行ったアンケートで、日本の核武装構想について「国際情勢によっては検討すべき」と答えている。
ちなみに、リビアのカダフィ指導者へのお土産はWiiにしました!
ちなみに、リビアのカダフィ指導者へのお土産はWiiにしました!
小池大臣は二〇〇三年一一月に毎日新聞が行ったアンケートで、日本の核武装構想について「国際情勢によっては検討すべき」と答えている。
Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike is a remarkable woman and a politician; unfortunately, she also has a remarkable prejudice against Japan’s Korean residents and other foreigners that make some question her fitness as a leader on the international stage. In such acts as tacitly denying that thousands of Koreans were slaughtered by Japanese mobs in 1923, and demanding opposition to voting rights for Japan’s resident foreigners—-she has exhibited a streak of xenophobia and revisionism that is troubling.(...)She has promoted herself as an environmental activist and "tolerant conservative" but in her political career has served as an executive member of the political arm of extreme right-wing Shinto cult and political lobby, Nippon Kaigi. Newsweek Japan, in last week’s cover story, dubbed her a “pushy hard-headed nationalist.”
Same-sex partnerships were another dividing line in the race. All three of Ms. Koike’s most significant opponents expressed support for them: Kenji Utsunomiya, a former president of the Japan Bar Association who was backed by the country’s largest opposition parties, including the Communist Party; Taisuke Ono, a former adviser to the governor of Kumamoto in southern Japan; and Taro Yamamoto, a former actor and the head of a newly founded party. When asked about the issue during an online question session, Ms. Koike said she “didn’t know” whether she would support such a policy. The victory on Sunday for Ms. Koike, an ultraconservative former defense minister who speaks English and Arabic, was something of a turnabout for her. Just a few years ago, she had seemed to have fallen out of favor with the public: In 2017, an upstart party she founded to challenge Mr. Abe’s governing Liberal Democratic Party in national elections took a drubbing, forcing her to admit “total defeat.”