Tokyo Olympics president Yoshiro Mori resigns after sexist comments

Tokyo Olympics president Yoshiro Mori resigns after sexist comments

TOKYO and LONDON -- Yoshiro Mori, the embattled president of the Tokyo Olympics organizing committee, resigned Friday following backlash over sexist comments he made suggesting women talk too much in meetings.

"As of today, I will resign from the president's position," Mori said during an executive board and council meeting. "My inappropriate comments have caused a lot of chaos."

Mori, an 83-year-old former prime minister of Japan, sparked outrage last week after he made the remarks during an executive board meeting that was held online. When giving his "private opinion" about the Japanese Olympic Committee's goal of increasing the number of female board directors from 20% to more than 40%, Mori expressed concern about how that would affect the length of meetings, according to a report by The Asahi Shimbun, one of Japan's largest daily newspapers.

"A meeting of an executive board that includes many women would take time," Mori was quoted as saying by the newspaper. "Women are competitive. When someone raises his or her hand and speaks, they probably think they should speak too. That is why they all end up making comments."

He also referred to the Tokyo Olympics organizing committee, saying it "includes about seven women, but they all know how to behave," the newspaper reported.

Yoshiro Mori, president of the Tokyo Olympics organizing committee, announces his resignation during an executive board and council meeting in Tokyo, Japan, on February 12, 2021.

Mori apologized for his remarks at a hastily-prepared press conference the following day. But by then, calls for his resignation were already trending on social media.

After announcing his resignation on Friday, Mori repeatedly said that he had regret over the remarks, but also said he had "no intention of neglecting women."

"The most important thing is to hold the Tokyo Olympics in July," he added. "I cannot allow my presence to serve as interference to the various preparations."

Mori was appointed to the position in 2014, just months after Tokyo won its bid to host the Olympics. The executive board was expected to pick his successor later on Friday.

Early reports said that Mori had picked Saburo Kawabuchi, the 84-year-old former president of the governing body of Japanese soccer and an ex-player himself. Kawabuchi indicated on Thursday that he had been contacted by Mori and would accept the position if offered, according to a report by Japanese public broadcaster NHK. But the news sparked further outrage that the process of choosing Mori's successor was not transparent and that replacing him with another man who is even older would not help the situation.

During a press conference Friday night, Toshiro Muto, chief executive officer of the Tokyo Olympics organizing committee, called Mori's remarks about women "extremely inappropriate" and divulged that Kawabuchi has decided he will turn down the job.

"We will pick a successor immediately," Muto told reporters. "We need to ensure that the process to appoint a successor will be transparent, as established by the executive board."

Demonstrators hold placards to protest against hosting the planned Tokyo 2020 Olympics near a building where organizing committee president Yoshiro Mori was to announce his resignation in Tokyo, Japan, on Feb. 12, 2021.

Japan's chief cabinet secretary, Katsunobu Kato, has also emphasized the need for transparency.

"Matters concerning personnel and operations must be transparent," Kato told reporters at a press conference Friday morning.

The controversy came just as Olympics organizers unveiled a series of "playbooks" for how they plan to hold a safe and successful Games in Tokyo this summer amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The 2020 Summer Olympics were supposed to kick off in the Japanese capital last year on July 24. But in late March, amid mounting calls to delay or cancel the upcoming Games, the International Olympic Committee and Japanese organizers announced that the event would be held a year later due to the COVID-19 pandemic. They have been outwardly staunch in their determination to go forward with the Games ever since, despite the fact that Japan -- and much of the world -- has seen a rise in coronavirus infections in recent weeks.

With less than six months left until opening day, Japan's mass vaccination program has yet to begin and Tokyo remains under a state of emergency due to a climbing number of COVID-19 cases and a growing death toll. Moreover, a recent poll by Japanese news agency Kyodo found that around 80% of people in Japan believe the Tokyo Olympics should not be held this summer.

"There shall be no delay," Muto said Friday.

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