The Japanese Government, especially the Ministry of Interior, expressed disapproval of that draft, and objected to the direct election of prefectural governors. As a result, based on the draft by the GHQ, the Constitution has come to provide for the following: (1) rules and regulations governing local public entities to be fixed in accordance with "the principle of local autonomy"; (2) the direct popular election of executive officers and assembly members in all local public entities; (3) the right of local public entities to manage local government property, affairs, and administration and to enact their own regulations; and (4) consent by the majority of the voters before any special law applicable to one local public entity can be enacted by the Diet.
The government of Japan is a constitutional monarchy whereby the power of the Emperor is limited and is relegated primarily to ceremonial duties. Like in many other states, the Government is divided into three branches: the Executive branch, the Legislative branch and the Judicial branch, as defined by the current post-war Constitution of Japan.