
North Korean State Media Report on South Korea's Presidential Election
Reuters file photo
A North Korean flag flutters at the propaganda village of Gijungdong in North Korea, on July 19, 2022.
SEOUL, June 5 (Reuters) – North Korean state media on Thursday reported for the first time on the outcome of South Korea's presidential election held earlier this week.
Lee Jae-myung, the candidate of the Democratic Party, was elected as South Korea's 21st president in the election held on June 3, two months after a president was impeached over the December 3 emergency martial law, the short KCNA report said.
The report did not comment any further.
North Korean media have remained quiet on South Korean politics during this election cycle.
In December, KCNA reported on growing public anger in South Korea against then President Yoon Suk Yeol following his short-lived imposition of martial law.

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Lee Jae-myung, a progressive who leads the Democratic Party of Korea, is the new president of South Korea. His victory Tuesday in a ballot to replace Yoon Suk Yeol, impeached after trying to launch a coup last year, caps an extraordinary life that took him from slums outside Seoul to his nation's highest office. He will need all that experience to address the daunting array of challenges — most immediately, uniting a bitterly divided public — that he inherits. Lee moderated his positions during the campaign in an attempt to make that job easier. That was enough to win a mandate in this week's ballot but far more will be required if South Korea is to navigate the difficult political and economic shoals that it faces. Lee, the front-runner from the start of the campaign, decisively bested conservative party candidate Kim Moon-soo, winning 49.4% of the vote to Kim's 41.2%, a nearly 3-million vote margin. Just under 80% (79.4%) of 44.39 million eligible voters cast ballots, second only to the 1997 election, when turnout reached 80.7%. By most accounts, the outcome was a referendum on Yoon and his catastrophic move to declare martial law six months ago. Lee has twice run for the presidency and his victory caps a remarkable journey. He was born in poverty, the fifth of seven children, in Andong, a city south of Seoul. He dropped out of middle school to earn money working in a factory. An accident at work left one arm permanently injured. He became a human rights lawyer and activist before commencing his political career. He served as mayor of the city of Seongnam, home to around 1 million people, and governor of Gyeonggi province. From there, he launched his failed first attempt to win the presidency, losing to Yoon by 0.7% of votes cast, the smallest margin in South Korean history. That served as his springboard to the National Assembly (after several failed attempts), where he led the opposition and worked assiduously to frustrate Yoon's ambitions and agenda. The success of those efforts prompted Yoon to declare martial law. Lee was attacked by an assassin in January 2024; a stab wound was serious but not life threatening. During this campaign, however, he often wore a bulletproof vest and spoke behind bulletproof glass. Lee was sworn in as 14th president of South Korea on Wednesday and promptly got to work on a 'mission of restoring democracy.' He noted after his victory that 'my responsibility is not to be a ruler, but to be a leader who brings people together.' That task goes hand in hand with putting the country's economy on stronger footing. Six months of interim rule in Seoul coincided with the advent of the second Trump administration, which has imposed tariffs on all trading partners and demanded concessions that few governments, much less one with no mandate, would have a hard time accepting. Those tariffs are extensive: 10% on all exports, 25% on steel and aluminum that doubled the day Lee was sworn in, 25% duties on imports of automobiles and Trump has threatened more on semiconductors and pharmaceuticals, two other important products for the country. They weigh especially heavily on an export oriented economy like that of South Korea. As a result, the Bank of Korea cut the country's growth forecast for this year by almost half (from 1.5% to 0.8%); that's only the fourth time in four decades that growth has dropped below 1%. The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development aligned with that assessment, concluding that South Korea's growth would slow to 1% in 2025. 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Rumors of possible withdrawal of a brigade from South Korea inflames those concerns. The South Koreans are acutely aware that U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth skipped Seoul on his two trips to the region. Keeping Trump happy while maintaining good relations with China, a critical trade partner, will be difficult. The U.S. president wants trade partners to align with Washington against Beijing, a choice that most Asian nations prefer not to make. Moreover, Lee, like most progressives, wants to ease tensions and to improve relations with North Korea. That requires a partner in Pyongyang; North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has shown no inclination to reach out to or deal with Seoul. If history is any guide, South Korea will be required to make all the concessions to make any relationship possible. Historically, such efforts have raised tensions with the U.S. Given Trump's relationship with Kim, that might not be a problem this time. 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His Democratic Party controls the National Assembly in South Korea and those efforts genuinely serve the country's national interest (as well as those of Japan). Job number one for Lee is revitalizing the economy. While working with the U.S. and mollifying the mercurial figure in the White House is key to that effort, cooperation with Japan (and other nations) will be vital as well. That should not be hard. As ever, Japan and South Korea share concerns and challenges. History continues to throw a long shadow over their relationship, but a bright future is possible only if the two countries recognize the alignment of their interests and work together to realize them. We wish Lee luck in his new job and hope he treats Japan as the partner it can and should be. The Japan Times Editorial Board


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