Ahead of the Nishinomiya mayoral election, ReHacQ (YouTube) held a debate with Takahashi and the three candidates〜
What is ReHacQ?
ReHacQ is a live-streamed program where people can speak more frankly than they usually would on TV. Host Takahashi asks these perfectly timed questions from a “wait, I don’t quite get it” perspective. There’s also a bit more time to talk, so I think it’s easier to see gaps in wording, evasions, true feelings, and even each person’s character〜
It was really worth watching.
That said, honestly, there were probably quite a few people who, partway through, found themselves thinking, “Wait, what were they arguing about just now?”…
Because what they were clashing over wasn’t about liking or disliking each other. It was more like:
・How the budget gets passed 💰
・How to reduce personnel costs 👤
・What to do with public kindergartens and nursery schools 👶
・How involved the mayor should be with the new hospital 🏥
・Garbage bag rules 🗑️
These may have been topics that are hard to follow unless you know the basics.
So this time, Nishi2 will break down the five heated points in an easy-to-understand way〜
Rather than looking at who won or lost, this is an article about “why they clashed” and “how it relates to residents’ everyday lives.”
※Some statements from the debate have been reworded by Nishi2 to make them easier to understand. Please check the video for the exact exchange〜
We covered the rough explanations of finances and children waiting for childcare spots there, so this time we’ll move through things quickly〜
目次
- 1 ❶ What was Nishinomiya’s first-ever “budget didn’t pass” situation?
- 2 ❷ Personnel costs: how exactly will they be reduced?
- 3 ❸ What should happen to public nursery schools and kindergartens?
- 4 ❹ This is where the mood changed: the integrated hospital and “transitional care”
- 5 ❺ Are the garbage bag rules okay as they are?
❶ What was Nishinomiya’s first-ever “budget didn’t pass” situation?
This was the most intense part 🔥.


If it had ended there, it would have just been, “Okay, he’s reflecting on it.” But what came next was the real issue.




In other words, the gap here is that “Ishii sees it as something that could have passed if it had been resubmitted,” while “Tanaka sees it as a lack of willingness to listen to the council before it got to that point.”
❷ Personnel costs: how exactly will they be reduced?
As we wrote in Part ② on money, Nishinomiya’s personnel costs have increased by about 6 billion yen over 10 years. Almost all of the money that comes in each year is being eaten up by fixed costs.
ReHacQ dug into this in even more concrete detail.




Then Takahashi asked, “What would you do if you were Tanaka?” And that leads into the next topic.
❸ What should happen to public nursery schools and kindergartens?
The conversation about personnel costs suddenly turns into a conversation about child-rearing. That might be part of what makes debates like this interesting.






By the way, as we wrote in Part ① on child-rearing, while Nishinomiya has 76 children officially on waiting lists, there are actually 1,148 people who couldn’t get in. “What to do with public childcare facilities” is an issue that feels even more urgent than the numbers suggest.
❹ This is where the mood changed: the integrated hospital and “transitional care”
Up to this point, the first few topics had been an intense Ishii vs. Tanaka exchange, but ❹ was a little different.
This was where Hatamoto’s own distinctive focus came through most clearly 🏥




Hatamoto also asked both Ishii and Tanaka about this theme at the Junior Chamber debate, so I think this is probably the topic he feels most strongly about.
❺ Are the garbage bag rules okay as they are?
The last topic that came up was garbage bags. It was covered pretty briefly in the debate, but because it’s so close to daily life, Shachomi thinks a lot of people are probably interested in it!
When Takahashi asked, “Are the garbage bag rules going to change?”…


















