South Korea will hold election on June 3 to replace ousted President Yoon Suk Yeol
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South Korean acting President Han Duck-soo, center, speaks during a Cabinet meeting at the government complex in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, April 8, 2025. (Hong Hae-in/Yonhap via AP)2025-04-08T04:03:46Z SEOUL, South Korea (AP) South Korea will hold a snap presidential election June 3 to replace recently ousted President Yoon Suk Yeol, the countrys acting leader Han Duck-soo announced Tuesday.The announcement came days after the Constitutional Court removed President Yoon Suk Yeol from office over his ill-fated imposition of martial law in December. By law, South Korea must elect a new president within 60 days of Yoons ouster.Deep political polarization will likely shape the election into a two-way showdown between the two major political parties: Yoons conservative People Power Party and its chief liberal rival, the Democratic Party.It will be an uphill battle for the People Power Party to hold on to power it struggles to restore public confidence and heal severe internal divisions left by Yoons martial law stunt.The focus of attention is on whether conservatives can regroup and field a strong candidate to compete against likely Democratic Party candidate Lee Jae-myung, who observers say is the clear front-runner. Potential candidatesSouth Koreas political parties are expected to launch primaries to select their presidential candidates in the coming weeks.The Democratic Party candidate is expected to be Lee, a powerful party leader who faces no major challengers inside the party. Lee, who narrowly lost the 2022 election to Yoon, led the party through a crisis during which many of its members faced off against troops sent by Yoon to surround the National Assembly and vote to lift martial law, and the later vote to impeach the president.About 10 politicians from the People Power Party are expected to seek the nomination. Conservatives in disarrayYoons baffling decision to enact martial law, which brought armed troops into Seouls streets and evoked the countrys traumatic memories of military rule was a blow to his partys reputation, even though it wasnt directly involved. Some reformist party members openly criticized Yoons actions and cast ballots to impeach him, triggering a feud with the partys old guard who supported the president.Yoon has diehard supporters who regularly staged massive rallies in Seoul and elsewhere. Many share an unfounded perception that Yoon is a victim of a leftist, North Korea-sympathizing opposition that has rigged elections to gain a legislative majority and plotted to remove a patriotic leader. South Koreas conservative party faces significant disadvantages heading into the upcoming election. Two months is a short time to unify the base, moderates and a conspiracy-driven fringe around a single candidate, said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul.The partys current leadership is filled with Yoon loyalists, and that will likely let the internal divide continue and undermine its electoral prospects, said Choi Jin, director of the Seoul-based Institute of Presidential Leadership.Among the People Power Party presidential hopefuls, Labor Minister Kim Moon Soo is considered to be the most pro-Yoon. He and Daegu Mayor Hong Joon-pyo opposed impeaching Yoon, while former party leader Han Dong-hoon and senior party lawmaker Ahn Cheol-soo supported removing him from office. The last major candidate is Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon, who has maintained an ambiguous position. Choi said Yoon will likely exert his influences to boost pro-Yoon figures who are seeking the nomination and party leadership posts so that they can defend him in as he faces a criminal trial. Yoon was charged with rebellion in January, and he could face other charges like abuse of power now that he has lost presidential immunity, which protected him from most criminal prosecutions.The People Power Party will need to nominate someone who can win over the public, particularly the moderates, rather than someone who can win the partys primaries, said Duyeon Kim, a senior analyst at the Center for a New American Security in Washington. Korean moderates and the young generation in their 20s and 30s will likely be the swing voters. Lees bidOpposition leader Lee, who has served as a provincial governor and a city mayor, is considered by his supporters as a populist reformer. But critics regard him as a demagogue who relies on stoking divisions and demonizing his rivals. Lee faces five ongoing trials for corruption and other charges. If he becomes president, those trials will likely stop thanks to presidential immunity.Yoon has repeatedly accused Lees Democratic Party of abusing its parliamentary majority status to obstruct his agenda, impeach senior officials and slash the governments budget bill. Yoon said his martial law decree was a desperate attempt to draw public support of his fight against wickedness of Lees party.Lee Jae-myung has many detractors among the South Korean public who believe he nearly broke the government for his own benefit, weaponizing the legislature to push Yoon over the edge and cast his own legal cases as political persecution, Easley said.Lees successful maneuvering, including the purge of progressive politicians disloyal to him, means he effectively owns the Democratic Party nomination and has the clearest path to the presidency, he said. HYUNG-JIN KIM Hyung-jin is an Associated Press reporter in Seoul, South Korea. He reports on security, political and other general news on the Korean Peninsula. twitter mailto
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