
Burden of Yoon's martial law looms over PPP primary race
The lingering risks stemming from former President Yoon Suk Yeol's martial law decree became a thorny issue among presidential hopefuls running in the People Power Party's primary for the June 3 presidential election.
A moment of tension was observed on Wednesday between former Labor Minister Kim Moon-soo and ex-People Power Party Chair Han Dong-hoon during a second press event held for the four contenders who advanced to the next round of the race. Besides Kim and Han, People Power Party Rep. Ahn Cheol-soo and ex-Daegu Mayor Hong Joon-pyo also made the cut.
'I plan to ask (former) Chair Han Dong-hoon in the upcoming debate whether he believes it is because of him that our party had to see (President Yoon) impeached, and now has to go through an election again,' Kim said as he stood next to Han, whom he chose as his preferred opposition in an upcoming televised debate.
In response, Han said, 'I've never doubted candidate Kim's heart of patriotism. But our party cannot avoid (the responsibility) tied to martial law or impeachment in this election.' The former People Power Party leader added he hopes to carry out the upcoming debate in a 'sincere' manner that could benefit the conservative bloc as a whole.
When he was still in office as labor minister, Kim expressed his disagreement with Yoon's impeachment in February, when the now former president was undergoing a Constitutional Court trial over his short-lived martial law imposition on Dec. 3, 2024.
Han had tried to convince ruling party lawmakers to vote in favor of Yoon's impeachment motion, which was eventually passed by the National Assembly on Dec. 14, 2024.
South Korea is now heading into an early presidential election on June 3, following the Constitutional Court's ruling that removed Yoon from office for violating the law and democratic principles with his martial declaration.
Ahead of the second press event, Ahn called for the three other contenders running against him in the primary to join him in his plan to apologize to the public for Yoon's impeachment and the political turmoil caused by it.
'Former President Yoon's impeachment is the conservative bloc's painful history. No one is free from the responsibility of his impeachment,' Ahn wrote on his Facebook. 'We must cross the river of impeachment to reach the road of the people and head towards the path of victory — we must all sincerely apologize to the people.'
Ahn also asked the other candidates to revise the Constitution to reform the current single, five-year presidential term to three years with the possibility of being reelected, if any among the four are elected as president.
The People Power Party's election management committee announced the four contenders for the party nomination on Tuesday evening. All four will now advance to the second round of the party's primary ahead of the June 3 presidential election.
Incheon Mayor Yoo Jeong-bok, North Gyeongsang Province Gov. Lee Cheol-woo, People Power Party Rep. Na Kyung-won and former People Power Party lawmaker Yang Hyang-ja failed to make the cut.
While Yang will not be participating in the next round of the primary, she officially announced her endorsement of Han on Wednesday, citing the need for a leader with a "future-oriented" mindset.
Tuesday's results were determined from surveys conducted by five polling agencies on Monday and Tuesday, involving a combined 4,000 respondents.
The party did not disclose the rates of support from the surveys for the eight candidates who competed in the first round.
While the names of those who made the cut were announced by the head of the party's election management committee Hwang Woo-yea, the former five-term lawmaker stressed that the announcement was made in Korean alphabetical order. It did not reflect the support rate the candidates received in any way, Hwang added.
The second round of the primary, which is the final one before the May 3 party convention, will involve multiple televised debates scheduled for Thursday, Friday and Saturday. On Sunday and Monday, People Power Party members will vote for the candidate they think their party should nominate, and another public survey will be conducted.
The results for the second round of the primary will be weighted such that half will be determined by the public survey and half by votes of party members, unlike the first round that only took the public opinion polls into consideration.
If the results point to a single candidate by early next week, then the primary is projected to wrap up with no further competition. However, if it is too close to call between two candidates, the primary is expected to continue into the party convention.
According to a Realmeter poll of all potential presidential candidates released this week, Rep. Lee Jae-myung, the former leader of the Democratic Party of Korea, held a strong lead with 50.2 percent of public support.
Trailing Lee was Kim Moon-soo with 12.2 percent. Han received 8.5 percent, Hong garnered 7.5 percent and Ahn saw 3.7 percent support.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Korea Herald
10 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Over 370,000 sign petition to expel Lee Jun-seok over misogynistic remark
Over 370,000 South Koreans had signed an online petition calling for Rep. Lee Jun-seok of the minor New Reform Party to be expelled from the National Assembly as of Sunday afternoon. The petition came after Lee cited a controversial misogynistic remark during a televised presidential debate on May 27, ahead of the June 3 presidential election. The number of people who had signed the petition stood at 375,346 as of around 5 p.m. Sunday, gaining supporters at a rapid pace just four days after it was posted on the National Assembly's petition page on June 4. The petition calls on the Assembly to review Lee's qualifications as a lawmaker and take disciplinary action against him, arguing that he 'betrayed the people's trust and damaged the dignity of a member of the National Assembly.' The petition is expected to be reviewed by the Assembly, as it garnered more than 50,000 signatures. If more than 50,000 people support a petition within 30 days of it being made public, it is considered valid and is deliberated by the relevant standing committee of the National Assembly. However, under the Constitution, expelling a member from the National Assembly requires the consent of at least two-thirds of all sitting members. The unnamed petitioner claimed that Lee, who was the New Reform Party's presidential candidate in the June 3 election, committed verbal sexual violence when he cited inappropriate language that depicted violence against women. 'Legislators are the representatives of all citizens. This means that a National Assembly member must engage in legislative activities aimed at eliminating discrimination, hatred against minorities and upholding the dignified lives of the people," the petitioner said, requesting that the National Assembly expel Lee from office for violating Article 155 of the National Assembly Act. The article stipulates that the assembly may take disciplinary action against lawmakers who violate general ethics principles for National Assembly members or rules governing their ethical practice. "But his inappropriate, violent language and his irresponsible attitude in justifying his actions severely undermined people's trust and damaged the dignity expected of a National Assembly member,' the petitioner added.


Korea Herald
16 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Over 350,000 sign petition to expel Lee Jun-seok over misogynistic remark
Over 350,000 South Koreans as of Sunday morning had signed an online petition calling for the expulsion of Rep. Lee Jun-seok of the minor conservative New Reform Party from the National Assembly. The petition came after Lee made a controversial misogynistic remark during a televised presidential debate on May 27, ahead of the June 3 presidential election. The petition, posted on the National Assembly's petition page on May 28, called on the parliament to review Lee's qualifications as a lawmaker and take disciplinary action against Lee, as 'he betrayed people's trust and damaged the dignity of a member of the National Assembly.' The petition is expected to be reviewed by the Assembly, as it garnered more than 50,000 signatures. If more than 50,000 people support a petition within 30 days of it being made public, it is considered valid and is deliberated by the relevant standing committee of the National Assembly. However, under the Constitution, expelling a member from the National Assembly requires the consent of at least two-thirds of all sitting members. The unnamed petitioner claimed that Lee, who was a presidential candidate of the New Reform Party in the June 3 election, committed verbal sexual violence by using inappropriate language that depicted violence against women. 'Legislators are the representatives of all citizens. This means that a National Assembly member must engage in legislative activities aimed at eliminating discrimination, hatred against minorities and upholding the dignified lives of the people," the petitioner said, requesting the National Assembly to expel Lee from office for violating Article 155 of the National Assembly Act. The article stipulates that the assembly may take disciplinary action against lawmakers who violate general ethics principles for the National Assembly member or rules governing the ethical practice of members of the National Assembly. "But his inappropriate, violent language and his irresponsible attitude in justifying his actions severely undermined people's trust and damaged the dignity expected of a National Assembly member,' the petitioner added.


Korea Herald
2 days ago
- Korea Herald
Bills to probe Yoon, wife pass National Assembly
Bill on suspected interference in investigation of Marine's death also passed; Presidential office says 'there is very little reason' to veto them The ruling Democratic Party of Korea-controlled National Assembly on Thursday passed contentious bills mandating special counsel probes into charges and scandals surrounding former President Yoon Suk Yeol and his wife, Kim Keon Hee. Three probe bills reintroduced by the Democratic Party were approved during a parliamentary plenary vote held in the afternoon. One pushes to launch a permanent special counsel to investigate 11 charges tied to Yoon's failed martial bid in December; another seeks to mainly investigate Kim's alleged inappropriate interference in the People Power Party's candidate nomination process in previous general and by-elections as well as her luxury bag scandal; the third looks into the allegations that the Yoon administration interfered in the military's investigation into a young Marine's death in 2023. All three bills were passed in a 194-3 vote with one abstention, in a package deal. The move came a day after President Lee Jae-myung, who was the Democratic Party Chair, was sworn into office. He won Tuesday's early election, securing 49.42 percent of the vote against his rival and People Power Party candidate Kim Moon-soo, who saw 41.15 percent. Lee was highly likely to approve and endorse the bills, as an official at the presidential office said, 'there is very little reason' to veto them, with all three 'receiving People's support,' in a press briefing after the plenary vote. People Power Party, which became the main opposition party on Wednesday, highlighted its party line against the passage of the bills ahead of the plenary vote. The majority of the party lawmakers boycotted all three votes. All three bills passed on Thursday had previous versions that were scrapped by former President Yoon's veto power. The bill mandating a permanent special counsel investigation against Yoon will look into 11 different charges tied to his martial law bid, including insurrection and military mutiny. The previous versions of the bill were vetoed and scrapped twice. The latest version expanded the scope of the charges from six to 11. Special counsel candidates will be nominated by the Democratic Party and the minor liberal Rebuilding Korea Party, from the parliament's side. The bill also eases regulations to access presidential archives. It lowers the threshold from the current approval needed from two-thirds of lawmakers or from a high court chief judge to three-fifths of the Assembly or permission from a district court chief judge. The bill concerning the first lady will look into her alleged role in a stock manipulation scandal as well as the inappropriate acceptance of a luxury bag from a Korean-American pastor and election-related scandals involving political broker Myung Tae-kyun. An amendment passed alongside the bills expands the scope of the number of assistant special prosecutors from four to seven and raises the cap on dispatched prosecutors from 40 to 60.