Masanobu Ogura (小倉將信, Masanobu Ogura, born May 30, 1981) is a Japanese politician. He is a member of the House of Representatives belonging to the Liberal Democratic Party. He served in the Second Kishida Cabinet and previously serving in the Second Kishida Cabinet (First Reshuffle) both times as Cabinet Office Minister of State for Special Missions.

Masanobu Ogura
小倉將信
Official portrait, 2021
Minister of State for Special Missions
Child Policy, Youth Empowerment
In office
1 April 2023 – 13 September 2023
Prime MinisterFumio Kishida
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byAyuko Kato
Minister of State for Special Missions
Declining Birthrate, Gender Equality
In office
10 August 2022 – 13 September 2023
Prime MinisterFumio Kishida
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byAyuko Kato
Member of the House of Representatives
In office
16 December 2012 – 9 October 2024
ConstituencyTokyo 23rd
Personal details
Born30 May 1981
Political partyLiberal Democratic

Biography

edit
 
Ogura (far right) at the launch of the Children and Families Agency, 3 April 2023.

Masanobu Ogura was born in Tokyo on 30 May 1981. After attending Eiko Gakuen Junior and Senior High School, he graduated from the University of Tokyo in 2004 and joined the Bank of Japan. He graduated from Oxford University in 2009 with an MA in Financial Economics.[1]

In July 2011, he retired from the Bank of Japan.[2] In November of the same year, he was appointed as the head of the Tokyo 23 Ward Branch of the House of Representatives through a public offering by the Tokyo Metropolitan Federation of the Liberal Democratic Party.[3]

He ran in the 46th House of Representatives general election in December 2012 and defeated the incumbent of the Democratic Party of Japan, Banri Kushibuchi, and Shunsuke Ito (Kousuke Ito's son) of the Japan Restoration Party, and was elected for the first time.[4]

In the 47th House of Representatives general election in December 2014, he defeated Kushibuchi and Ito again and was re-elected. On August 7, 2017, he was appointed Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications in the 3rd Abe Cabinet in the 3rd Reshuffle.[5]

He was in the 48th House of Representatives in October 2017.

References

edit