New Party Daichi
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New Party Daichi
Summary
New Party Daichi is a local political party[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- New Party Daichi is in the country of Japan[3].
- New Party Daichi's instance of is recorded as local political party[4].
- New Party Daichi's founder is recorded as Muneo Suzuki[5].
- New Party Daichi's headquarters location is recorded as Sapporo[6].
- New Party Daichi's headquarters location is recorded as Nagatachō[7].
- New Party Daichi's Commons category is recorded as New Party Daichi[8].
- New Party Daichi's sRGB color hex triplet is recorded as 008000[9].
- New Party Daichi's chairperson is recorded as Muneo Suzuki[10].
- August 18, 2005 marks the founding of New Party Daichi[11].
- New Party Daichi's official website is recorded as http://www.muneo.gr.jp/[12].
- New Party Daichi's topic's main category is recorded as Category:New Party Daichi[13].
- New Party Daichi's applies to jurisdiction is recorded as Hokkaido[14].
- New Party Daichi's political ideology is recorded as regionalism[15].
- New Party Daichi's political ideology is recorded as green conservatism[16].
- New Party Daichi's political ideology is recorded as localism[17].
- New Party Daichi's political ideology is recorded as Ainu people[18].
- New Party Daichi's political ideology is recorded as Russophilia[19].
- New Party Daichi's number of seats is recorded as {'amount': '+1'}[20].
- New Party Daichi's political alignment is recorded as centre-right[21].
- New Party Daichi's legal form is recorded as political party[22].
- New Party Daichi's different from is recorded as New Party Daichi – True Democrats[23].
- New Party Daichi's named by is recorded as Chiharu Matsuyama[24].
Body
Founding
New Party Daichi's founder is recorded as Muneo Suzuki[5]. August 18, 2005 marks the founding of it[11].
Leadership
New Party Daichi's chairperson is recorded as Muneo Suzuki[10].
Operations
Headquarters locations include Sapporo[6], a city designated by government ordinance[25], in Japan[26], founded in 1870[27] and Nagatachō[7], a chōchō[28], in Japan[29].
Why It Matters
New Party Daichi has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]