APâs Tokyo-based all-formats team encouraged Cabinet minister Seiko Noda to speak openly and at length. She didnât hold back.
Planning and smart questions produced an outspoken AP interview with Seiko Noda, Japanâs minister for gender equality and childrenâs issues, who is a leading contender to be Japanâs first female prime minister. Noda is one of only two women in Japanâs Cabinet; the Japanese parliament is only 10% women.
She highlighted those points during the exclusive all-formats interview led by Tokyo correspondent Mari Yamaguchi and co-written with Japan news director Foster Klug. The more powerful lower house of Japanâs two-chamber parliament is predominantly âpeople who do not menstruate, do not get pregnant and cannot breastfeed,â Noda said.
Careful preparation by Yamaguchi and Klug, along with chief photographer Eugene Hoshiko and senior video producer Haruka Nuga, led to a list of questions that encouraged Noda to speak at length.
She did not hold back, sounding off on one of the worldâs most glaring gender gaps, blaming the countryâs record low birthrate and plunging population on âindifference and ignoranceâ in the male-dominated parliament, and describing what itâs like for a woman to break into the male-dominated world of Japanese politics.
Her suggestion of a quota system to increase female candidates for political office met with criticism from male colleagues who say women should be judged by their abilities. âMen can just be men, and I guess, for them, just being male can be considered their ability,â she said.
At the end of the sit-down, Noda was so energized she allowed Hoshiko and Nuga to make images of her notes on Japanâs shrinking population.
The AP package turned heads in Japan and beyond. For a candid, revealing interview that vividly exposes womenâs simmering frustration at Japanâs male-centric political culture, the team of Yamaguchi, Hoshiko, Nuga and Klug earns APâs Best of the Week â Second Winner.
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