What Japan Thinks: LDP Rep Calls 30,000-Person Demo “Playing Pretend,” SNS Explodes

LDP Lower House member Kado Hiroko told a TV panel that the 30,000-strong penlight protest outside the Diet was just "playing pretend" at democracy. The reply section disagreed, loudly. The dominant rebuttal was that the real 'pretend' politics is hers, and that Kado mistakes protest for theater because she's never had to listen to citizens who don't fund her campaign.

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Overall verdict: Overwhelmingly negative, with the phrase flipped right back at her. When LDP freshman Kado Hiroko called the 30,000-person “penlight demo” outside the Diet “playing pretend,” reply-guys on both left and center turned the insult around on her. The top reply, with over 3,500 likes, reads simply: “Tell your useless prime minister to stop playing pretend at being PM.” Across the 384 most-engaged replies, a clear majority defended demonstrations as a core of democratic participation, with many calling Kado condescending, out-of-touch, or unfit for office. A secondary vein of mockery hit Kado personally, as a well-known block-happy LDP backbencher and ex-METI bureaucrat who had supposedly forgotten that citizens, not donors, put her in her seat. A smaller but loud supporter camp argued the protest numbers were inflated, that the crowd was JCP-adjacent, and that demos don’t move election results. But the dominant tone was indignation, not debate, and even some of Kado’s defenders conceded she had chosen her words poorly on national TV.
Note: Comments on X (formerly Twitter) in Japan tend to skew toward the political right, though individual threads may lean left depending on the original poster and topic. These comments are not necessarily representative of the Japanese population as a whole.
Comments analyzed
384
Total likes
34,232
Total retweets
7,152
Peak hour
12:00
JST, 2026-04-17
What the tweet was about

On an April 14 broadcast of Abema Prime, Kado Hiroko — a 45-year-old first-term LDP Lower House member and former METI bureaucrat — was asked about a 30,000-person protest outside the Diet opposing PM Takaichi Sanae. She replied, “Gathering at the Diet and waving penlights isn’t going to change the government. Everyone knows that. Taking that kind of action and feeling like you accomplished something — I know this sounds harsh, but to me it just looks like playing pretend” (ごっこ遊び, gokko asobi).

The phrase detonated. Kado’s usage implied the protest was childish, symbolic at best and LARP at worst. Critics noted that the April 8 protest was one of a multi-month series of demonstrations against Takaichi’s push to revise Article 9 of the constitution and to enact new surveillance legislation — the same 30,000+ who have been the main counter-force to the LDP’s supermajority since the snap election.

Nikkan Gendai’s post describing the backlash hit 22,000+ likes within a day. Kado later clarified on her own account that she meant demonstrations alone, without also building parties and running candidates, were insufficient — but the clarification landed with a crowd that was already reading her as dismissing citizen speech on principle.

Sentiment distribution (engagement-weighted)
Democracy is no game
53.3%
Attacks on Kado
17.4%
Flip on Takaichi
13.5%
Agree with Kado
9.5%
Framing debate
6.4%
54%
defended protest
as democracy
vs.
31%
flipped “pretend”
back at the LDP
Engagement-weighted. The top reply, with 3,500+ likes, told Nikkan Gendai to “tell your useless PM to stop playing pretend at being PM too.” Only about 9% of engagement went to replies agreeing with Kado that the demo was theater.
Highest-engagement comments
Flip on Takaichi
@nikkan_gendai おたくの無能首相に総理大臣ごっこ遊びするのもうやめろって伝えといて下さい
“Tell your useless prime minister to stop playing pretend at being PM too, would you?”
♥ 3,501 RT 614 Views 37,304
Democracy is no game
@nikkan_gendai @tosamoto では、「ごっこ遊び」の成果として、落選していただくのがよいかもしれません。誰があなたをそのポジションにしたのか、もう一度よく考えてみるといい。主権者は国民。デモは主権者の大切な政治参加の一つ。民主主義の根幹に関わること。 https://t.co/yIMXGYHqjs
“Well then, maybe the ‘result’ of our ‘playing pretend’ should be you losing your seat. Stop and think about who put you in that chair. Sovereignty lies with the people. Demonstrations are one vital form of political participation by the sovereign. This goes to the root of democracy.”
♥ 2,418 RT 593 Views 30,571
Attacks on Kado
@nikkan_gendai 門ひろこ自民党衆議院議員であり元経産省官僚です。 国民の声について『ごっこ遊び』と発言するあたり、今までどのような視線で国民に向き合って来たのかがよく表れている。 どんなに勉強しても心は豊かにならないんだよね。大変残念な方です。
“Kado Hiroko is a first-term LDP lower-house member and former METI bureaucrat. Calling the voice of the public ‘playing pretend’ tells you exactly how she’s been looking down at the public all along. No amount of studying makes your heart grow. A truly disappointing person.”
♥ 2,015 RT 572 Views 23,982
Democracy is no game
@nikkan_gendai @MisatoFlove 民意をバカにするふざけた政治家 こんな人間がいちばん憲法を変えたがってる、恐ろしい話だ そして必死でデモをけなしていてデモが効いているらしい😂ますますその重要性がわかった またデモに行くぞ❗️ #門ひろこ #憲法改悪反対 #デモは民主主義の根幹を成す手段です
“A politician who mocks the public will. And she’s the one who most wants to change the constitution, which is terrifying. She’s working so hard to trash the demos, the demos must be working 😂 I’m going again. #KadoHiroko #NoConstitutionalRevision #DemonstrationsAreTheFoundationOfDemocracy”
♥ 1,411 RT 364 Views 10,983
Democracy is no game
@nikkan_gendai みんなどんな思いを持ってデモに行ってるか? やむにやまれず、貴重な時間を犠牲にして行ってるんだよ! 国民に寄り添う議員でなければ存在する意味がない。即刻辞職せよ! #自民党犯罪組織 #門寛子衆院議員 #平和憲法を守る0408
“Do you have any idea what people are carrying in their hearts when they go to those demonstrations? They’re giving up their precious time, forced to go by conscience. A lawmaker who won’t stand with the people has no reason to exist. Resign immediately!”
♥ 1,079 RT 244 Views 11,319
Democracy is no game
@nikkan_gendai @Anti_Discrimina 民主主義なめんな https://t.co/Hp73zZOygG
“Don’t you dare disrespect democracy.”
♥ 939 RT 151 Views 16,567
Attacks on Kado
@nikkan_gendai 本気で政治を変えるなら政党をつくれってことで本人が自民党でしか議員になれないなら、自分こそ自分では何もやる気ないってことですよ 根拠なく人数を嘘だと主張、またデモで政権が倒れないなどとお隣韓国の事情を知らず歴史認識不足. 返ってデモのモチベーションを上げる結果になりました😄
“If you really want to change politics, go make your own party. If you can only be a lawmaker under the LDP, you’re the one who doesn’t really want to do anything. Baselessly claiming the crowd numbers are lies, and not knowing Korea’s history enough to claim demonstrations never topple governments. Honestly, this just made everyone more motivated to demonstrate 😄”
♥ 837 RT 154 Views 8,780
Agree with Kado
@nikkan_gendai 「国会に集まってペンライトを振るって、それで政権変わらないですよね。分かってますよね、皆さん」 「そういう手段を取って『やった気』になっている」 「厳しいことを言うようですけど『ごっこ遊び』にしか見えない」 100%同意見だな、自分は ごっこ遊びにしか見えない
“”Gathering at the Diet and waving penlights isn’t going to change the government, everyone knows that.” “Taking that kind of action and just feeling you accomplished something.” “I know this sounds harsh, but to me it just looks like playing pretend.” 100% agree. It does just look like playing pretend.”
♥ 835 RT 54 Views 8,199
Framing debate
@nikkan_gendai 炎上してるのは、目指してるものが 暴力革命で、共産党が後押ししてくれるけど生ぬるいとか言ってくる学生たちにじゃね? https://t.co/RTqMTmMYG0
“The thing catching fire isn’t the demo, it’s the students saying they aim for ‘violent revolution’ and complaining the JCP backing them is ‘too soft,’ isn’t it?”
♥ 816 RT 69 Views 17,306
Attacks on Kado
@nikkan_gendai 犬笛を吹いていたので通報して、拡散しておきました。 https://t.co/koAKl8PEXK
“She was blowing a dog whistle, so I reported it and signal-boosted it.”
♥ 628 RT 116 Views 13,057
Democracy is no game
@nikkan_gendai ペンライトデモは、高市政権に反対する「国民の意見」であり、それを意味のないものとして揶揄する人は、民主主義国家の政治家とはいえません まあそもそも、「反対意見など聞く必要がない派」の代表が、高市早苗な訳ですが… #高市やめろ #自民党を倒せ #自民党解体一択
“The penlight demo is a ‘voice of the people’ opposing the Takaichi government. Anyone who mocks it as meaningless cannot call themselves a politician of a democratic country. Then again, the head of the ‘no-need-to-listen-to-opposition’ party is Takaichi Sanae herself…”
♥ 607 RT 132 Views 5,809
Democracy is no game
@nikkan_gendai 民主主義は投票だけではないし、集会の自由を毛嫌いするのはファシストの類い そもそも、一般国民の生活や命さえ軽視する悪政をやらせている与党が悪い #石油危機は高市総理の責任 #高額療養費の限度額引き上げを撤回してください #国会正門前大行動0419 https://t.co/MasuL2WnHw
“Democracy isn’t only voting, and hating the freedom of assembly is the mark of a fascist. And frankly, the real problem is the ruling party running a terrible government that treats ordinary people’s lives as expendable.”
♥ 541 RT 155 Views 5,468
Activity timeline (JST, 2026-04-17)
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Japan Standard Time (JST = UTC+9). Activity peaked around 12:00 JST.
Key themes in detail
🚫 Democracy is no game (53.3% of engagement)

The dominant reply framed Kado’s remark as an attack on democratic participation itself. Respondents argued that protest, assembly, and criticism are constitutional rights regardless of whether they move the dial on the next election, and that a sitting Diet member treating constituent demonstrations as child’s play disqualifies her from office. Several invoked Tanaka Kakuei’s dictum that “a politician who can’t feel the people’s pain can’t do the job.”

The free-assembly principle came through repeatedly: “Democracy isn’t only voting,” “Hating the freedom of assembly is the mark of a fascist,” and a sociologist-quoting reply citing Oguma Eiji on “a society that can demonstrate.” A significant subset called for Kado to resign outright, with hashtags like #門寛子やめろ and #門ひろこを落とそう gathering dozens of attached replies.

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🪞 Attacks on Kado (17.4% of engagement)

A second major vein went after Kado personally. Multiple top replies pointed out that Kado is a notorious blocker on X — respondents who had criticized her said they’d been silently blocked without interaction — and described her as a “Takaichi Child” (高市チルドレン), a backbencher whose entire career rests on loyalty rather than independent standing.

“This person is the one playing at being a politician,” went the flip. Critics noted that as an ex-METI bureaucrat, she represents exactly the kind of credentialed, elite, party-machine politician whom voters encounter only as a gatekeeper. Many posts paired this with Kado’s rumored alignment with the pro-male-line imperial succession faction, framing her as patriarchal and out of touch.

🎭 Flip on Takaichi (13.5% of engagement)

A parallel thread used Kado’s phrase as a weapon against PM Takaichi’s entire governance. “Takaichi’s summit diplomacy is the real ‘playing pretend,'” wrote one commenter with nearly 200 likes: phone calls lose the first ten minutes to interpreter pleasantries, and the Macron visit reportedly involved Takaichi reading prepared remarks off paper. Another contrasted the demo’s “pretend” with Takaichi’s “hug diplomacy,” self-defense-force photo ops at the party convention, and an LDP youth-wing scandal involving a reported swingers’ party.

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A sarcastic variant offered to take Kado at her word: “So there’s no problem if we keep doing it, right? If it’s just pretend play, let’s all grab penlights and pretend-protest at scale. And when the police show up, we just say ‘we’re playing pretend, officer.’ Peaceful, everyone wins.”

👍 Agree with Kado (9.5% of engagement)

A minority of replies, mostly from accounts that read as LDP-aligned or anti-opposition, defended Kado’s core claim. Their argument: organizer-claimed attendance of 30,000 is an inflation of perhaps 3,000 actual attendees; the protests are dominated by the JCP or fringe student groups like Zengakuren calling for “violent revolution,” which makes the penlights look grotesquely naive; and three election losses in a row show that demonstrations don’t convert into ballots.

“The LDP just won a snap election three months ago on the explicit issue of a mandate for Takaichi. If you understood democracy, you’d know 30,000 at the Diet isn’t a mandate,” one top-tier reply said.

🧷 Framing debate (6.4% of engagement)

A smaller thread focused on how the protest itself is being narrated. Several respondents pushed back specifically on the identification of the penlight demos with Zengakuren (全学連) or “violent revolution” rhetoric, noting that the actual April 8 rally was organized by a coalition including “WE WANT OUR FUTURE” and the “Don’t Break Article 9 Committee,” with most turnout driven by individual callouts. Zengakuren affiliates appeared as participants but weren’t the organizers, and conflating the two, commenters argued, is how Abema’s producers built the segment that Kado walked into.

A related argument framed penlight demos as a Reiwa-era, K-pop-influenced, individual-participation style closer to South Korea’s candlelight protests or NO KINGS rallies in Taiwan, not the Showa-era student-sect protests that Abema was implicitly comparing them to. “Demo equals violence is such a Showa worldview,” one reply noted.


What Japan Thinks: LDP Rep Calls 30,000-Person Demo “Playing Pretend,” SNS Explodes

LDP Lower House member Kado Hiroko told a TV panel that the 30,000-strong penlight protest outside the Diet was just “playing pretend” at democracy. The reply section disagreed, loudly. The dominant rebuttal was that the real ‘pretend’ politics is hers, and that Kado mistakes protest for theater because she’s never had to listen to citizens who don’t fund her campaign.

Read More »

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