Count was a Japanese samurai and politician during the Bakumatsu and early Meiji period of Japanese history. He was a leader of which would evolve into a political party.
Gotà  was born in Tosa Domain (present day Kà Âchi Prefecture). Together with fellow Tosa samurai Sakamoto Ryà Âma, he was attracted by the radical pro-Imperial Sonnà  jà Âi movement. After being promoted, he essentially seized power within the Tosa Domain's politics and exerted influence on Tosa daimyà  Yamauchi Toyoshige to call on shà Âgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu to return power peacefully to the Emperor.
After the Meiji Restoration, Gotà  was appointed to a number of posts, including that of Governor of Osaka, and sangi (councillor), but later left the Meiji government in 1873 over disagreement with the government's policy of restraint toward Korea (i.e. the Seikanron debate) and, more generally, in opposition to the Chà Âshà «-Satsuma domination of the new government. Jointly with Itagaki Taisuke, he submitted a memorandum calling for the establishment of a popularly elected parliament. In 1874, together with Itagaki Taisuke, and Età  Shinpei and Soejima Taneomi of Hizen Province, he formed the Aikoku Kà Âtà  (Public Party of Patriots), declaring, "We, the thirty millions of people in Japan are all equally endowed with certain definite rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring and possessing property, and obtaining a livelihood and pursuing happiness. These rights are by Nature bestowed upon all men, and, therefore, cannot be taken away by the power of any man." This anti-government stance appealed to the discontented remnants of the samurai class and the rural aristocracy (who resented centralized taxation) and peasants (who were discontented with high prices and low wages).
After the Osaka Conference of 1875, he returned briefly to the government, participating in the Genrà Âin. He also managed a coal mine in Kyà «shà « (the Takashima Coal Mine), but finding it to be losing money, sold his interest to Iwasaki Yatarà Â.
In 1881, he returned to politics, assisting Itagaki Taisuke found the Jiyà «to (Liberal Party) which developed the daidà  danketsu (coalition) movement in 1887.
In 1889, Gotà  joined the Kuroda Cabinet as Communications Minister, remaining in that post under the First Yamagata Cabinet and First Matsukata Cabinet. Under the new kazoku peerage system, he was elevated to hakushaku (count). In the Second Ità  Cabinet he became Agriculture and Commerce minister. He was implicated in a scandal involving futures trading, and was forced to retire. After a heart attack, he retired to his summer home in Hakone, Kanagawa, where he died in 1896. His grave is at the Aoyama Cemetery in Tokyo.