| The ''Seitaisho'', or "Document on the Form of Government," was issued by the [[Meiji government]] on [[1868]]/int.4/27, and elaborated upon the [[Charter Oath]] of several months previous, laying out the governmental structures within which (or by which) the Charter Oath would be implemented. | | The ''Seitaisho'', or "Document on the Form of Government," was issued by the [[Meiji government]] on [[1868]]/int.4/27, and elaborated upon the [[Charter Oath]] of several months previous, laying out the governmental structures within which (or by which) the Charter Oath would be implemented. |
− | The ''Seitaisho'' delineates that power would be held by the Council of State (''[[Dajokan|Dajôkan]]''), which would be divided into executive, legislative, and judicial branches. This would end the problem of dual authorities (the Imperial Court and [[Tokugawa shogunate]]), while also creating a system of checks and balances. It also details methods by which members of the legislature would be selected, by popular ballot, for four-year terms, albeit with half the officials retaining their terms for six years, so as to set up a staggering effect, by which at any given time only half the officials were being replaced in elections, thus allowing for continuity of governance. Finally, a taxation system was to be set up by which all people of all social statuses - including salaried officials - would pay one-thirtieth of their income in tax, to support the government.
| + | Drafted by [[Soejima Taneomi]] and [[Fukuoka Takachika]],<ref>"[http://www.ndl.go.jp/portrait/datas/115.html?cat=43 Soejima Taneomi]," ''Kindai Nihonjin no shôzô'', National Diet Library, 2013.</ref> the ''Seitaisho'' delineates that power would be held by the Council of State (''[[Dajokan|Dajôkan]]''), which would be divided into executive, legislative, and judicial branches. This would end the problem of dual authorities (the Imperial Court and [[Tokugawa shogunate]]), while also creating a system of checks and balances. It also details methods by which members of the legislature would be selected, by popular ballot, for four-year terms, albeit with half the officials retaining their terms for six years, so as to set up a staggering effect, by which at any given time only half the officials were being replaced in elections, thus allowing for continuity of governance. Finally, a taxation system was to be set up by which all people of all social statuses - including salaried officials - would pay one-thirtieth of their income in tax, to support the government. |
| *David Lu, ''Japan: A Documentary History'', 306-309. | | *David Lu, ''Japan: A Documentary History'', 306-309. |