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Backlash in Japan over Fukuoka officials’ costly overseas ‘research trips’

The Fukuoka prefectural government admitted it spent more than US$2 million on the excursions, triggering public anger

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The Fukuoka prefectural government office in Japan. Photo: Google Maps
Julian Ryall
Officials in Japan’s southwestern prefecture of Fukuoka are facing growing scrutiny over a series of overseas “research trips” that included stays in Paris and London and millions of yen in hotel upgrades, as public frustration builds over political spending during a period of rising household costs.

The controversies have put pressure on Governor Seitaro Hattori and the local chapter of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in Fukuoka, one of Japan’s most important regional governments and the economic centre of the country’s southwest.

Hattori expressed “regret” at a press conference on Tuesday, saying that “established practice” had not been followed in the planning of 23 overseas trips since 2021.

The prefectural government, which confirmed it had spent 337 million yen (US$2.08 million) on the excursions, including hotel upgrades, has promised to “review long-standing customs”.

The local government is dominated by elected LDP representatives, which is still trying to recover from a slush-fund scandal that gripped the party at the national level in 2023.

Governor Seitaro Hattori of Fukuoka prefecture. Photo: Wiki/Cabinet Office Regional Revitalisation Promotion Office
Governor Seitaro Hattori of Fukuoka prefecture. Photo: Wiki/Cabinet Office Regional Revitalisation Promotion Office

Analysts say countless incidents of politicians taking expensive overseas trips at taxpayers’ expense have occurred in recent decades, but argue that the Fukuoka case may be landing harder because many people across Japan are struggling with higher prices for food and other essentials while wages have largely remained static.

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