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  1. Hitoshi Ashida (芦田 均, Ashida Hitoshi, 15 November 1887 – 20 June 1959) was a Japanese politician who served as Prime Minister of Japan in 1948. He was a prominent figure in the immediate postwar political landscape, but was forced to resign his leadership responsibilities after a corruption scandal (Shōwa Denkō Jiken) targeting two of ...

  2. Hitoshi Ashida: The Diplomat, Journalist, and Advocate for International Peace. Hitoshi Ashida was born in Fukuchiyama City of Kyoto on 15 November 1887, as a second son of Shikanosuke Ashida, who served as a member of the House of Representatives. Ashida majored in law at the Tokyo Impe-rial University and passed the entrance examination of ...

  3. Feb 7, 2022 · While serving as a parliamentarian, Ashida worked as president and editor-in-chief at The Japan Times from 1933 to 1939 in order to criticize Japan’s militarist diplomacy and publish his opinion essays regarding Japan’s foreign policy and international politics. 9 Regarding the debate on whether Japan should secede from the League of ...

    • Daisuke Akimoto
  4. Hitoshi Ashida kept a journal from 1905 right up until just before he died in 1959, in it he chronicles his work in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, his time in the House of Representatives, his postwar activities as a member of the Shidehara Cabinet and the Katayama Cabinet, and eventually as Prime Minister.

    • [October 1945 to May 1946]
  5. Feb 7, 2022 · Download Citation | Hitoshi Ashida: The Diplomat, Journalist, and Advocate for International Peace | Hitoshi Ashida was born in Fukuchiyama City of Kyoto on 15 November 1887, as a second son...

    • Daisuke Akimoto
  6. Hitoshi Ashida (芦田 均, Ashida Hitoshi, 15 November 1887 – 20 June 1959) was a Japanese politician who served as Prime Minister of Japan in 1948. He was a prominent figure in the immediate postwar political landscape, but was forced to resign his leadership responsibilities after a corruption scandal (Shōwa Denkō Jiken) targeting two of ...

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  8. After a decades-long career as a diplomat, Ashida returned to Japan to serve as the president of the Japan Times between 1933 and 1939. Between these years, the paper featured periodic editorials detailing Ashida’s opinion on current affairs. The resulting 2,500 articles culminate in a record of Ashida’s storytelling,