
First female university president tapped as education minister
Lee, 65, is known for being the first female president of a flagship national university and is highly regarded for her leadership in higher education.
A graduate of Chungnam National University's architectural engineering program, she earned a master's degree in architectural planning from the same institution and a doctorate in environmental architectural planning from Tokyo Institute of Technology.
After joining her alma mater in 1989 as a professor, she then became the school's first female president in its 68-year history.
Lee's nomination is seen as aligning with the administration's key pledge to develop '10 Seoul National Universities' by investing in nine regional flagship universities. As head of the initiative during the presidential campaign, she emphasized education as a tool for regional revitalization and equity.
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Korea Herald
an hour ago
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Lee's approval rating falls for 2nd week to 51.1%: poll
President Lee Jae Myung's approval rating fell for a second straight week, a survey showed Monday, amid controversies over his special pardons for political figures and proposed tax code revisions on stock investment. According to the survey by Realmeter and commissioned by a local news outlet, 51.1 percent gave a positive assessment of Lee's handling of state affairs, down 5.4 percentage points from the previous week, while the negative assessment rose 6.3 percentage points to 44.5 percent. Realmeter cited the public's disappointment over Lee's special pardon for political figures and businesspeople on Liberation Day as well as confusion over proposed tax code revisions on stock investment as reasons that fueled negative public sentiment. The survey was conducted on 2,003 adults from Monday to Friday last week and had a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points, with a confidence rate of 95 percent. In a separate survey conducted by the same pollster on 1,001 individuals aged 18 and over Thursday and Friday, the approval rating for the ruling Democratic Party plunged 8.5 percentage points to 39.9 percent. Support for the main opposition People Power Party rose 6.4 percentage points to 36.7 percent. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points, with a confidence rate of 95 percent.


Korea Herald
2 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Lee calls for phased steps to implement existing inter-Korean pacts to restore ties with N. Korea
President Lee Jae Myung on Monday called for taking steps where necessary to implement existing inter-Korean agreements, days after he reaffirmed his pledge to restore ties and trust with North Korea, including reviving the 2018 military tension reduction pact. "True security lies in safeguarding peace. What we need now is the courage to steadily take steps to ease tensions while firmly maintaining an ironclad defense posture," Lee said during a Cabinet meeting. "I ask the relevant ministries to prepare for a phased implementation of existing inter-Korean agreements, starting with those where possible," Lee said. His remarks came after he reinforced in his Liberation Day address that his government will take measures to reduce tensions and restore trust with Pyongyang. Lee said the South under his leadership will respect the North's current system and that it will not pursue any form of unification by absorption. He also said that Seoul will take "proactive, gradual steps" to restore the Sept. 19 military agreement, signed between the two sides in 2018 to reduce border tensions. (Yonhap)


Korea Herald
4 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Lee to send special envoys to China around early next week: sources
President Lee Jae Myung plans to send a group of special envoys to China around early next week, coinciding with his upcoming trips to Japan and the United States for summit talks with their leaders, sources said Monday. The delegation will include former National Assembly Speaker Park Byeong-seug, ruling Democratic Party lawmakers Kim Tae-nyeon and Park Jeung, and Roh Jae-hun, son of former President Roh Tae-woo, according to the sources. "It's not final yet, but I understand they are working to set the departure date in line with the anniversary of the establishment of Korea-China diplomatic relations," a ruling party official said on condition of anonymity. Seoul and Beijing formed diplomatic ties on Aug. 24, 1992. A presidential official said related discussions are still ongoing, declining to give more details. If realized, the envoys' visit to China would coincide with Lee's planned trips to Tokyo on Aug. 23-24 and to Washington afterwards for summit talks with Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and US President Donald Trump. The likely dispatch of the envoys would reflect Lee's commitment to managing relations with China, alongside his engagement with Washington and Tokyo. Seoul is in talks with Beijing to arrange a meeting between the special envoys and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, the sources said. The envoys are expected to convey a letter from Lee to Chinese President Xi Jinping underscoring the importance of bilateral ties and requesting his attendance at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in South Korea in late October. (Yonhap)