いそだまさし|尼崎市市議会議員/自民党 蒼風会

尼崎市市議会議員/自民党 蒼風会 いそだまさし(礒田雅司)の公式サイトです。地域とともに動く人。安心して歳を重ね、子どもが育つ尼崎へ。あなたの声を、ぜひ届けてください。.

WordPress

Report generated on April 6, 2026

isodamasashi.com
Screenshot of isodamasashi.com

A note on how to read this

This report is ProdPoke's take on your site — think of it as a first impression from a very opinionated robot. We check real things (load times, broken links, accessibility patterns), but we also try to understand what your site is trying to do and whether the technical details support that goal. Some of our observations might not apply to your specific situation, and that's okay. We're getting sharper with every scan. If something feels off, tell us — it makes us better.

Key Insights for いそだまさし|尼崎市市議会議員/自民党 蒼風会

13 unlabeled buttons block visually impaired voters from your platform entirely

Constituents using screen readers cannot navigate your site or understand how to access your free children's study circle signup, committee updates, or contact form. This violates accessibility standards and excludes voters who depend on assistive technology.

Your contact form has a mystery input field—screen readers can't identify it

Community members trying to submit inquiries about your disaster prevention work or policy feedback cannot determine what information the unlabeled field requires. This directly reduces constituent engagement and feedback.

Japanese font fails to load, forcing fallback rendering that looks less professional to voters

Your policy positions and activity reports on education/childcare support display in a generic fallback font instead of the intentional Noto Sans JP typeface. For a Japanese political campaign, this undermines visual credibility with local constituents.

No candidate photo appears when supporters share your page on LINE or Facebook

When constituents promote your free Monday study circle or community initiatives on social media, the link preview is blank instead of showing your candidate image. This reduces viral reach of your announcements in Amagasaki's local networks.

3.4-second load time frustrates mobile users checking your event schedule

Older voters and busy constituents on smartphones may abandon your page before finding meeting times, committee schedules, or your contact form. In Japan, mobile-first access is critical for local politician outreach.

What ProdPoke understands about いそだまさし|尼崎市市議会議員/自民党 蒼風会

This is a personal political website for Masashi Isoda (礒田まさし), a city council member (市議会議員) for Amagasaki City who was first elected in June 2024. The site presents his profile, policy platform focused on education/childcare support, local business revitalization, and disaster prevention, and shares activity reports about his work in the community. Specific initiatives visible include running a free children's study circle (子ども無料学習サークル) held weekly on Mondays, participating in local disaster drills, and serving on the Construction, Fire, and Disaster Prevention Committee. The site functions as a public communication platform where constituents can learn about his background as a local liquor store owner and community activist, his policy goals for creating a safe Amagasaki where three generations can live securely, and contact him through a form.

Based on exploring 5 pages across the site

First Impression — How clear is your site?

82
Crystal clear

This is the official website of Isoda Masashi (礒田雅司), a member of the Amagasaki City Council and member of the Liberal Democratic Party's 'Sōfūkai' faction. The site presents his political platform with the tagline "三世代が安心して暮らせる街をつくります" (Creating a town where three generations can live with peace of mind). The site contains sections for profile, policies, activity reports, and news.

This score measures how quickly a first-time visitor understands what your site does — based on visible headings, navigation, and visual hierarchy alone.

88/ 100

Overall Score

Strong foundation.

Performance

92/100

Page load could be faster: 3367ms

medium

Your campaign page takes 3.4 seconds to load. Constituents checking your policy positions, event schedules, or trying to submit contact inquiries on mobile devices (common in Japan) may experience frustration or abandon the page, reducing accessibility to your community message.

Expected: Under 3000ms
Found: 3367ms

SEO

92/100

Missing Open Graph tags: og:image

medium

When constituents or supporters share links to your campaign page or specific policy initiatives on social media (Facebook, LINE, Twitter), the preview won't include your candidate image or a compelling thumbnail. This reduces engagement when promoting your free children's study circle announcements or community activity updates.

Expected: og:title, og:description, og:image all present
Found: Missing: og:image

Accessibility

70/100

13 interactive element(s) without accessible names

high

13 interactive elements on your site (likely navigation buttons, menu items, or action buttons for your committee work or contact features) lack accessible names. Constituents using screen readers cannot understand what these buttons do, making it impossible for visually impaired voters to navigate your platform or access your services.

Expected: All interactive elements have accessible names
Found: 13 missing: <a>, <a>, <a>, <a>, <a>

1 form input(s) without labels

high

Your contact form has an input field without a proper label. Screen reader users cannot identify what information to enter, and even sighted users may be confused about the field's purpose. This directly impacts your ability to receive constituent inquiries and feedback.

Expected: Every input has a <label> or aria-label
Found: Missing labels: textarea: g-recaptcha-response

Functional

92/100

3 button(s) with no visible text or icon

medium

Three buttons on your site have no visible text or icons identifying their function. Constituents—particularly older voters in Amagasaki—won't understand what these buttons do (whether they submit forms, navigate to event details, or perform other actions), reducing interaction with your campaign content.

Expected: All buttons have visible text or icon
Found: 3 empty buttons

Technical Health

Network request failed: https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Noto+Sans+JP:400,600,700&display=swap

likelyhigh

The Japanese font (Noto Sans JP) from Google Fonts failed to load due to a network blocking issue. This impacts the visual presentation of your campaign materials and constituent communications, making Japanese text potentially render in a fallback font that may appear less professional to local voters viewing your policy positions and activity reports.

Compliance

100/100
All clear — no issues found in this category.

Key Metrics

Crawlability

Sitemap.xml
Robots.txt
Broken Links0

Standards

HTTPS
Mobile Responsive
Images Missing Alt0

Improvement Plan

Your campaign site has a critical accessibility problem that excludes voters and violates web standards. Thirteen interactive elements lack accessible names, and your contact form contains an unlabeled input field. Screen reader users—including visually impaired constituents—cannot navigate your site or submit inquiries. This is your highest priority: work with your web developer to add proper ARIA labels and form labels to all buttons and inputs immediately. This is a legal and ethical issue for public-facing political communication.

Second, fix the Japanese font loading issue. Your Noto Sans JP typeface is failing to load from Google Fonts due to a network block, causing your policy statements and activity reports to render in a less professional fallback font. This is particularly important for a Japanese political campaign where typography conveys professionalism. Add a local font fallback or use a system font stack that loads reliably without external dependencies.

Third, add Open Graph metadata tags (og:image, og:title, og:description) to your page. When supporters share your free children's study circle announcements or your construction/disaster prevention committee updates on LINE, Facebook, or Twitter, the link preview will now show your candidate photo and a compelling description. This amplifies organic sharing within Amagasaki's community networks.

Fourth, optimize page load time from 3.4 seconds to under 2 seconds. Compress images, defer non-critical JavaScript, and minify CSS. Mobile users checking your Monday event schedule or submitting contact forms will have a smoother experience, especially older voters less comfortable with slow-loading pages.

Finally, add visible text or icons to the three buttons with no labels. Elderly constituents in particular need clear visual cues to understand whether a button submits a form, reveals your policy details, or navigates to event information.

Suggested priority order:

  1. 13 interactive element(s) without accessible names
  2. 1 form input(s) without labels
  3. Network request failed: Noto Sans JP font
  4. Missing Open Graph tags: og:image
  5. Page load could be faster: 3367ms
  6. 3 button(s) with no visible text or icon

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What is ProdPoke?

Automated analysis generated on April 6, 2026. Not professional advice. Contact us to modify or remove this report.