The genrō — the informal, extra‑constitutional advisers who guided Japanese politicsfrom the Meiji Restoration to the eve of the Pacific War — have been characterized aseither stabilizers or obstacles to democratic development. This paper demonstratesthat both characterizations miss the institutional reality: the genrō were scaffolding —a temporary support structure designed to be removed once the constitutional orderachieved the liberal equilibrium the founders envisioned. This is not a metaphor. Thegenrō designation required unrepeatable founding merit; contemporaries expectedthe institution to expire as the party cabinet system matured; and U.S. AmbassadorGrew’s 1940 dispatch confirms this expectation was disrupted only by political terror‑ism. The constitutional design was sound: it envisioned a non‑governing sovereignand open institutional channels for civil‑military coordination. What broke the systemwas not a design flaw but a structural bug: four institutional modifications by a singlegenrō, Yamagata Aritomo (Sophia, forthcoming‑c), progressively severed every chan‑nel through which civilian and military authority could coordinate. The system wasalready non‑functional as a formal mechanism by the Russo‑Japanese War, but cus‑tom and personal relationships provided bypass routes that were never stress‑tested— creating the illusion of a validated system. The gap between reality (severed chan‑nels) and perception (working system) explains the terrorism that destroyed Japanesedemocracy: actors who found the system unresponsive concluded it was obstructed bycorrupt politicians and resorted to direct appeal to the Emperor — the only remainingchannel, which the bugs had never intended to be sole. The paper reconceptualizes thegenrō as a preventive supreme authority — the architects retaining override capacityabove the system they built — and identifies a democratic paradox: commercial mediamanufactured the popular militarism that democratic institutions then transmitted.The scaffolding dissolved as designed. The building had not survived.
Franny Philos Sophia (Thu,) studied this question.