Yoshiro Mori resigned as president of the Tokyo Olympics organizing committee on Feb. 12 following an uproar over his sexist remarks. Mori’s resignation was inevitable and came way too late in ...
Criticism over the sexist remarks uttered by Tokyo Olympic organizing committee chief Yoshiro Mori spread in the Cabinet and overseas after his apology fell flat and he rejected calls to resign.
Former Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori has made another sexist remark that will likely draw the ire of women running for office. Speaking at a Tokyo fund-raiser for an Upper House member of the ...
Japanese women used Yoshiro Mori’s own sexist words against him and quickly generated a wave of protest against the Tokyo Olympic organizing committee chief and misogyny in society. The hashtag ...
The fund-raising campaign was launched in May this year, asking for donations of 5,000 yen ($34.80) or more to a bank account named, “Mori Yoshiro sensei honor project.” The donor drive is not ...
Saburo Kawabuchi has decided not to succeed Yoshiro Mori as president of the Tokyo Olympic organizing committee after the offer added to the criticism and bewilderment in the ongoing sexism scandal.
Yoshiro Mori, chief of the Tokyo Olympics organizing committee, has come under fire for saying that “competitive” women prolong meetings with their need to talk. Mori made the remarks Feb. 3 ...
Prosecutors have interviewed Yoshiro Mori, former chief of the Tokyo Olympics organizing committee, three times in connection with a bribery scandal involving sponsors for the Games, investigative ...
Ruling party lawmaker Mio Sugita was voted the political figure who made the most sexist remark over the past year, defeating former Tokyo Olympic chief Yoshiro Mori. Sugita, a 53-year-old Lower ...
Yoshiro Mori will resign as head of the Tokyo Olympic organizing committee following a week of widespread criticism over his sexist remarks, several sources said on Feb. 11. Although Mori ...
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said the sexist remarks by Yoshiro Mori, chief of the Tokyo Olympic organizing committee, were bad for Japan’s interests but refused to enter the fray over whether ...
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