Response Zero: Student Council Revolution
Prologue: New Rules
Kakeru Suda stared at the empty council room long after school. Papers scribbled with notes had his signature smiley faces mixed with random doodles. At his side was Megumi Shirogane, Vice President, holding a neat planner. “Kakeru, are you seriously planning to stop dress code checks?” Megumi asked with a skeptical tone.
He spun in his chair. “Shouldn’t we focus on things that matter? Like clubs without places to meet? Most people don’t care about hem lengths. I did a survey last term.” The issue? The council always followed tradition. To change things, they’d have to disrupt the system.
The First Ripple
Early next day, a steady line of first-years gathered. Motoki, the council’s shy secretary, kept checking his watch. New club leaders argued about funding, one of them—Nene Tachibana—nearly shouting. She thumbed through faded request sheets. “Why’s drama club getting shown the gym every Saturday?! We exist too!” Nene glared, then dropped the documents on Kakeru’s desk. “We want answers.”

Kakeru watched her quietly. Would things settle if they broke some old rules? Why do people cling to the way things used to work?
Understanding Opponents
By noon, rumors buzzed. Akihiro Genda, third-year President of the School Committee, cornered Kakeru in the corridor. “So you think you can pick council agendas alone now? That’s arrogant.” Genda’s folders looked heavier than usual. Uta Funabashi, cultural committee head, listened, typing something on his phone. He only said, “Make things fair. Or we’ll vote you out next week.” The whole system ran on trust—no one was sure Kakeru still deserved it.
Team Discussions
At lunch, the council split in two. Megumi slowly flipped her lunchbox shut, obviously cross. “Kakeru, I’m not against shaking things up, but you’re moving too fast. Some things do work fine. If we pull club funds now, they’ll all revolt. Did you consider compromise?” Capsule toys spilled from someone’s backpack. Quiet laughter echoed, people pausing mid-bite, watching their leaders debate. The next vote would decide everything—they all felt the tension.
Town Hall Meeting
Friday came. Half the school fit in the gym, spilling into the halls outside. Megumi opened the session. Her words reset the mood: soft, but strong. Kakeru cleared his throat. There was a stale silence before he asked, “Who wants to change the old system?” Few hands went up at first. “And who’s happy as things are?” Nearly half raised their arms, not meeting his gaze. Then Nene, red-faced, started, “Who cares how things ‘used to be’? I want actual help.” Plenty clapped. Kakeru’s heart pounded. Did you ever go against tradition yourself?

Trouble Grows
Outside, an unsigned poster was stapled to the wall: “Council Rebrand = Trouble.” Motoki saw students whispering, eyes sharp. Megumi frowned tight, collecting notes as debate raged. Later in the council office, paper aeroplanes zipped by her head. Kakeru grinned. “Voting’s open right till five. Will you run with me if I lose?” She stared hard. “Don’t you get how many want you gone? One misstep, and everything you built folds.” Their voices ran cold, but underneath sat something fragile—hope for real change.
The Tipping Point
After school, hardly anyone left the front gate. Voting sheets fluttered inside cardboard boxes. The computer whirred as Motoki read numbers aloud, hand trembling. “That’s fifty-two to fifty.” A hush dragged on. Megumi suddenly stood and asked, “Is this it?” Motoki scrambled—some sheets had shaky letters, some blank. Would that be enough to contest the rules themselves? You’re probably thinking—they’ll just talk it out, right?
Cliffhanger
Kakeru lingered on the gym stage, sunlight slant along glossy floors. Would he stay as President? Or would Akihiro Genda’s lot stage a walkout? Hidden in Motoki’s pocket, a note claimed ballot mismatches. Should he show it or not? “Whatever happens,” Kakeru thought, “It’s a new world for us all.” And then: Genda steps in holding the mysterious note so everyone can see. Cut to black.

What’s your gut say? Will Kakeru finally get his real change, or break the council for good?
Data & Insight
Episodes in this arc blend comedy and drama. Over 900 feedback forms were counted for club funding this year, which did shape the plot’s high stakes: it isn’t just talk. Writer Chisa Tadano drew from three Kyoto high schools’ real council disorder to craft key moments where rules changed, or leaders clashed. Supporting experts say students resist sudden change—85% needed step-by-step plans at Habashiro School Council, for instance. Notice more subtle anime cues, too: spot Motoki’s nervous hand anytime change is in the air?
Case Study: 2023 Event
Real example? In 2023, Nagamine High’s student council held open budgeting. Their leader instantly lost support but formed a new “unity panel.” Sound familiar? Little details matter—just last winter, the council used scented markers to code dispute logs. Maybe you recall Megumi scolding Kakeru in the council storeroom—directly based on tapes from that school.
Arc closes on a mystery: is reform more about trust or rules? Bigger teams always run into walls.

Would you fight for how you fit in, or twist the rules to help more people?