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in 1901 and was instrumental in the expansion of that firm in a major national newspaper with increased business coverage, hiring Japan’s first woman journalist, and the issuing of an evening edition in 1906. Also in 1906 he travelled to the United States and Europe on an inspection tour of the
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During his tenure as
Communications Minister, Tanomogi promulgated an aggressive five-year shipbuilding plan to expand Japan’s merchant fleet by six million tons with government subsidies. He also promoted the complete
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was allowed to receive and send overseas telegraph messages, thus giving Dōmei a monopoly from which every
Japanese newspaper was forced to obtain its news.
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and had the benefit to the government of enabling state control without the expense of compensating owners. Although the plan had the support of the
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of Japan’s electric power industry, with the state assuming complete managerial control without actually seizing ownership. The plan was based on
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as its president. In 1939, he was elected Mayor of Tokyo. He died while in office and his grave is at
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overseas newspaper business and on his return to Japan almost three years later in 1908, he founded a
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political party. He was elected a total of nine times, changing his party affiliation to the
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A History of
Japanese Journalism: Japan's Press Club as the Last Obstacle to a Mature Press
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the Japan Press Agency. He also established a company to import raw film for
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Fueling Growth: The Energy
Revolution and Economic Policy in Postwar Japan
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in 1910 created a sensation. Tanomogi was elected as an assemblyman from
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newspaper in 1896. In 1899 he founded his own newspaper, the
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was a journalist, politician and cabinet minister in
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Constitutional
Democratic Party (Japan) politicians
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293:Heroic with Grace: Legendary Women of Japan
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140:Tanomogi was born in what is now part of
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111:, 5 November 1867 – 29 February 1940)
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373:Biography at National Diet Library
321:. Harvard University Asia Center.
241:In 1938, Tanomogi returned to the
214:from March 1936 to February 1937.
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184:House of Representatives of Japan
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317:Hein, Laura Elizabeth (1995).
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464:Government ministers of Japan
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232:state control of the economy
80:politician, cabinet minister
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484:Rikken Dōshikai politicians
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425:24 Apr 1939 – 19 Feb 1940
396:Minister of Communications
343:De Lange, William (1998).
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37:Tanomogi Keikichi in 1929
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204:Wakatsuki administration
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208:Communications Minister
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130:Tokyo Academy of Music
489:Kenseikai politicians
212:Hirota administration
180:1915 General Election
459:Japanese journalists
406:Tatsunosuke Yamazaki
347:. Psychology Press.
200:Katō administration
142:Fukuyama, Hiroshima
57:Fukuyama, Hiroshima
16:Japanese politician
381:Political offices
175:in Tokyo in 1911.
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428:Succeeded by
403:Succeeded by
389:Mochizuki Keisuke
102:Tanomogi Keikichi
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23:Tanomogi Keikichi
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70:(1940-02-29)
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302:0873325524
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253:References
249:in Tokyo.
186:under the
161:press club
136:Early life
121:and early
49:1867-11-05
192:Kenseikai
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119:Taishō
113:was a
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108:頼母木桂吉
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