logo
The turbulent life of South Korea's new leader — Lee Jae-myung's rise from child laborer to divisive President

The turbulent life of South Korea's new leader — Lee Jae-myung's rise from child laborer to divisive President

New York Post03-06-2025
Lee Jae-myung was a child laborer with an arm deformity.
He attempted suicide.
He later made his way through university and became a highly divisive politician who survived a stabbing attack and struggles with numerous criminal charges.
Advertisement
5 Lee Jae-myung, 60, a child laborer with an arm deformity who also attempted suicide, made his way to become a highly divisive politician who survived a stabbing attack and struggles with numerous criminal charges.
Getty Images
His turbulent life climaxed, as Lee, 60, the candidate of the main liberal Democratic Party, was elected as South Korea's new president to succeed his conservative archrival Yoon Suk Yeol, who was ousted over his stunning imposition of martial law.
There are both hopes and fears about Lee's win.
Advertisement
Supporters think he's an able leader who can get things done and fix the country's deep-rooted economic inequality and corruption.
But critics say Lee will likely oppress political opponents and intensify a domestic division.
Here's a look at Lee, whose single, five-year presidency begins on Wednesday:
Childhood poverty
After graduating from an elementary school, Lee had to work at various factories in Seongnam, a city near Seoul, because his family couldn't afford his secondary education.
Advertisement
At a factory manufacturing baseball gloves, he had his left forearm crushed by a press machine, getting a permanent arm disability.
Lee said he suffered beating at his factories and hated encountering a girl who was a neighbor when he helped his garbage collector father's work at a traditional market.
5 Jae-myung was elected as the next president of South Korea after Yoon Suk Yeol was ousted after declaring martial law.
Getty Images
Despaired, Lee tried to kill himself twice, both unsuccessfully.
Advertisement
He later got back on his feet and entered Seoul's Chung-Ang University with a full scholarship, before he became a human rights lawyer.
'Hopes and ordeals always come together. The roles of ordeals are not getting people to surrender, but testing how serious and desperate their hopes are,' Lee said in a memoir published in 2017.
Liberal firebrand
Lee later entered politics and became Seongnam mayor and governor of Gyeonggi province.
Once a political outsider, Lee rose to prominence in 2016 after he made a series of fiery street speeches criticizing then conservative President Park Geun-hye, who was later removed from office over a corruption scandal.
'Let's seize her with our hands and consign her to history,' Lee said during one rally in December 2016.
Many of his comments have since sharply polarized South Koreans.
5 Supporters believe Lee Jae-myung could get things done and help fix the country's economy, while critics believe he will oppress political opponents and create division among party lines.
AP
Lee vilified South Korea's conservative establishment as greedy 'fake conservatives.'
Advertisement
He slammed a U.S. missile defense system in South Korea as a source of tensions and likened strengthening U.S.-Japan ties to a 1905 Washington-Tokyo agreement that he said helped Japan colonize the Korean Peninsula later.
Lee's proposal of giving a universal basic income to all citizens have invited accusations that he's a populist.
In 2022, he lost the hotly contested presidential election to Yoon.
In 2024, Lee was attacked by a man who told investigators that he wanted to kill Lee to prevent him from becoming president.
Foreign policy challenges
Advertisement
Recently, Lee has made few contentious or radical comments on foreign policy and security issues, and rather has promised to pursue pragmatic diplomacy.
He's repeatedly described South Korea's alliance with the U.S. as the foundation of the country's foreign policy and stressed the need to maintain a trilateral Seoul-Washington-Tokyo security partnership.
5 Before becoming president, Jae-myung was the Seongnam mayor and governor of the Gyeonggi province.
AFP via Getty Images
'When it comes to what Lee said in the past, we don't know whether he made such comments only to appeal to his supporters or whether they showed his true nature,' said Shin Yul, a politics professor at Seoul's Myonggi University.
Advertisement
The major issues that Lee will immediately face is U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war and other 'America First' policies, and North Korea's advancing nuclear program.
They are both vital issues for South Korea, but many experts say there isn't much diplomatic room for South Korea to maneuver in to produce major changes in its favor in both matters.
Paik Wooyeal, a professor at Seoul's Yonsei University, said that Trump is 'too overwhelming and dominant,' so that whoever is in South Korean leadership, the country's dealings with the U.S. won't be much different.
He said that foreign policy advisers for Lee would also know that North Korea won't voluntarily give up its nuclear weapons.
Advertisement
5 Jae-myung's presidency will begin on Wednesday.
AFP via Getty Images
Legal woods
Lee comes to office under the shadow of his own legal troubles.
He stands accused in five trials over corruption and other charges, and at one point, some of his legal battles threatened his bid for presidency.
Lee celebrated in March when the Seoul High Court overturned a suspended prison sentence against him for violating the election law during the 2022 race.
But he fumed in May when the Supreme Court quashed that ruling and sent the case back to the high court, citing a strong likelihood of his guilt. Hearings at the high court were eventually postponed until after the election.
Had his conviction been finalized, Lee would have been barred from running for president.
Other trials center around his roles in dubious development projects and illegal money transfers to North Korea, and his alleged misuse of official funds and persuading of a witness to commit perjury.
Lee's five trials will likely stop as South Korea's constitution prevents a sitting president from being charged with most crimes.
But his rivals will take issue with it, because the constitution doesn't clearly state whether a president can be convicted for crimes in which indictments came before taking up office.
Lee's Democratic Party, which holds a majority in the National Assembly, has been pushing to revise the criminal procedure law to suspend ongoing criminal trials involving a sitting president until the end of their term.
Conservatives have harshly lambasted the move.
National split
During the presidential campaign, Lee vowed not to pursue a vendetta against conservatives.
However, he has also called for a thorough investigation into Yoon and his inner circle over rebellion allegations.
Lee's opponents worry he could use those investigations to clamp down on Yoon associates and prosecutors who he thinks orchestrated inquiries involving his criminal charges.
Yoon's martial law stunt intensified a domestic divide.
Declaring martial law, Yoon portrayed Lee's party as 'anti-state' forces influenced by North Korea and China.
He has also endorsed baseless election fraud theories to discredit the liberals' legislative majority, prompting his angry supporters to pour onto the streets with 'Stop the Steal' signs.
Anti-Yoon activists and citizens, for their part, also rallied for weeks to demand his immediate dismissal.
With liberals remaining in control of the legislature, Lee faces a far more favorable environment to advance his policies.
Conservatives have voiced concern that Lee and the Democratic Party will wield virtually unchecked power to pass legislation previously blocked by Yoon's administration, including bills aimed at strengthening protections for labor unionists against corporate lawsuits and shielding farmers from volatile rice prices.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rift emerges between allies Russia and Iran over $1.75B weapons deal, Putin's lack of support for Tehran
Rift emerges between allies Russia and Iran over $1.75B weapons deal, Putin's lack of support for Tehran

New York Post

time27 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Rift emerges between allies Russia and Iran over $1.75B weapons deal, Putin's lack of support for Tehran

A rift is reportedly emerging between allies Russia and Iran, after Tehran feels it's gotten shortchanged in strongman Vladimir Putin's war against Ukraine. Moscow inked a $1.75 billion weapons deal with the Islamic Republic in 2023 — called at the time 'a covert partnership' — to get the designs to domestically produce Iran's infamous Shahed drones, which it had been importing since launching its full-scale invasion on Ukraine a year earlier. 4 Putin inked a deal with Iran in 2023 to get the designs for its Shahed drones. MIKHAIL METZEL/SPUTNIK/KREMLIN POOL/EPA/Shutterstock But Tehran has been growing increasingly frustrated with the little backing it's received from Russia since, CNN reported, citing a Western intelligence source. The resentment hit a high note during the Islamic Republic's 12-day war with Israel in June, when Tehran was expecting more than just words from its ally. 4 At the start of its invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Russia paid as much as $200,000 for just one of these Iranian drones. NurPhoto via Getty Images Russian officials condemned Israel's attacked as 'unprovoked and unacceptable' and offered to mediate the conflict — but did not provide any military support to Iran, despite the two countries' partnership. Left to fend for itself, the Iranian regime was badly battered and weakened during the conflict. The Jewish state carried out numerous devastating aerial strikes on the Islamic Republic and its nuclear facilities, killing more than 30 Iranian commanders, at least 11 of the regime's top nuclear masterminds and sending the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei into hiding. 4 The unmanned drones are sometimes refered to as 'kamikaze' drones because they self-destruct after reaching their target. Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images It showed Russia's 'purely transactional and utilitarian nature,' the intelligence official told the outlet. 'This explicit disengagement demonstrates that Russia never intervenes beyond its immediate interests, even when a partner – here an essential supplier of drones – is attacked,' they said. The Shahed drones — also referred to as kamikaze drones — have since become the cornerstone of Moscow's war machine, when hundreds of are often launched on Ukraine in a single evening. 4 Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei reportedly feels cheated from his deal with Putin. LEADER OFFICE/AFP via Getty Images To add insult to injury, Putin's men have taken Tehran's designs and developed better, cheaper versions — and failed to make some of its payments to Iran because of the Western sanctions placed on the Kremlin. It is unclear how much Moscow has yet to pay its counterpart toward the deal. Russia has also modernized the drones to make them more lethal and harder to bring down, according to Ukraine, leaving Tehran in the dark about the developments. It's also brought down the cost from $200,000 for one Shahed drone — to just $70,000. Intelligence officials believe as much as 90% of Shahed production is now done inside Russia, and satellite images show the largest drone factory — in Alabuga, 600 miles east of Moscow — is continuing to expand.

Stephen A. Smith calls out Dems like AOC and Jasmine Crockett as bad look for face of the party
Stephen A. Smith calls out Dems like AOC and Jasmine Crockett as bad look for face of the party

Fox News

time31 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Stephen A. Smith calls out Dems like AOC and Jasmine Crockett as bad look for face of the party

ESPN host Stephen A. Smith blasted the Democratic Party on "Real Time" on Friday for spotlighting progressive candidates like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-T.X., and argued that Republicans are having a "field day" with all the coverage these progressive Democrats are receiving. Smith contended that while he may not agree with everything President Donald Trump is currently doing, he asserted that some Democrats on Capitol Hill have taken their rhetoric about the president too far, and that their antics will not "work to the benefit of the Democratic Party." "When you listen to Jasmine Crockett or an AOC and the way they talk about them, even an Elizabeth Warren to a lesser degree or what have you, the Republicans are having a field day," he stated. "They're like, 'Put them up on the screen. Let's show them.' They put they plaster them all over the place." The ESPN host then turned his attention to NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, noting that while New Yorkers might vote for him, "America won't." "In a general election, you are going to fall if you are anti-America, if you are anti-capitalism, and you want to embrace extreme leftism and socialism," he argued. Smith stated that "they want you scared to say that you're not scared," and assured the audience that he is not afraid to challenge progressives like Ocasio-Cortez, Crockett or Mamdani. Talk show host Dr. Phil, who was also on the show's panel, chimed in, agreeing with Smith's take that Americans are no longer scared of voicing their political beliefs. "Middle America, the heartland, that 80% of America, the heartland of America, is finding their voice, and they're not going to be scared," he stated. "They need to speak up and say what they believe." "Real Time" host Bill Maher noted that Smith and Dr. Phil may be the "unity ticket" that Americans are looking for. It has long been rumored that Smith may run for president in 2028, with the ESPN host hinting at a "possible" presidential bid earlier in the show, adding that he is "disgusted" with the Democratic Party in its current form.

Thousands in the Ivory Coast protest the exclusion of opposition leaders from election

time36 minutes ago

Thousands in the Ivory Coast protest the exclusion of opposition leaders from election

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast -- Thousands of Ivorians took to the streets in Abidjan, the capital of the West African nation, to protest against the exclusion of opposition leaders from the upcoming presidential election. Ivory Coast, a nation of 32 million that is the biggest economy of francophone West Africa, is due to hold a presidential vote in October. Earlier this year four main opposition figures, including former President Laurent Gbagbo and former Credit Suisse chief executive Tidjane Thiam, were barred from running by the electoral commission. Protesters gathered Saturday morning in Yopougon, a densely populated suburb of the capital Abidjan, holding banners with messages such as: 'Enough is enough!' and 'No true democracy without true justice." Gbagbo and Thiam joined forces earlier this year to challenge incumbent President Alassane Ouattara. The 83-year-old leader announced last month that he would seek a fourth presidential term. His candidacy is contested after he changed the constitution in 2016 to remove presidential term limits. 'We are millions saying YES to Gbagbo and Thiam" said another banner in the crowd. 'We don't want a fourth term, and we want the electoral roll revised, that's what we are asking for," said Sagesse Divine, an activist who participated in Saturday's march. "We want all candidates' names included, and we want to go to the elections in peace, that's all we want.' There was no immediate comments from Ivorian authorities. Thiam, president of the Democratic Party of Ivory Coast, won the party's primary in an uncontested vote in April. Seen as Ouattara's main rival, he has been barred from running on the grounds that he was still a French citizen at the time he declared his candidacy, even though he later renounced his French nationality. Ivorian law bans dual nationals from running for president. Elections in Ivory Coast have usually been fraught with tension and violence. When Ouattara announced his bid for a third term, several people were killed in election violence. Ouattara is the latest among a growing number of leaders in West Africa who remain in power by changing constitutional term limits. Ouattara justified his decision to run again by saying that the Ivory Coast is facing unprecedented security, economic and monetary challenges that require experience to manage them effectively. spreading from the Sahel region into wealthier West African coastal states, such as Ivory Coast, Togo and Benin.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store