Wouldn't that apply more to the assembly that invalidated the choice of the people through a putsch? Tanaka could have dissolved the assembly, but decided to let the people decide the issue by running again. Seems pretty mature to me... let's hope the people of Nagano think so too.Instead, the contenders said the former governor's "childish and self-centered" political manners triggered his confrontation with the assembly.
That's not a democracy, that's a dictatorship. The reason for having an executive is to counter-balance the power of the assembly... just as the lawyer's job is to provide a counter-balance to the power of the State when enforcing the laws.Lawyer Keiko Hasegawa, 50, said Tanaka failed to carry out policies smoothly because he didn't make any effort to join hands with the assembly.
"The governor and the assembly must work together closely," Hasegawa said. "If they work separately, they cannot grapple with problems squarely."