
Who is S. Korea's new acting President Lee Ju-ho?
Education Minister and Deputy Prime Minister for Social Affairs Lee Ju-ho has assumed the role of acing president, following the successive resignations of former Prime Minister Han Duck-soo and Finance Minister Choi Sang-mok.
Lee will serve in the role until the presidential election scheduled for June 3.
With his predecessors in the presidential line of succession stepping down one after another, the education policy expert, as the fourth-ranking official in the presidential line of succession, is now overseeing state affairs, including foreign policy, national security and the economy.
In his current role, Lee is to simultaneously act as president, prime minister, deputy prime minister for economic affairs and education minister — effectively wearing four hats.
Under South Korea's Constitution and Government Organization Act, if the president is unable to perform his or her duties, the line of succession for acting president is as follows: prime minister, deputy prime minister for economic affairs (finance minister), deputy prime minister for social affairs (education minister) and then other Cabinet ministers in a designated order.
Lee assumed the role after Yoon's impeachment and removal from office and two subsequent resignations.
An economist specializing in labor economics, Lee has served as education minister twice. He previously headed the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology under the Lee Myung-bak administration from 2010-13. Lee was again appointed as education minister in November 2022 under President Yoon Suk Yeol.
During Yoon's presidency, Lee spearheaded several major education reforms. He introduced the Neulbom School program, which offers free after-school care for young elementary students, and led efforts to expand medical school admissions by 2,000 seats, which ultimately collapses. He also championed the adoption of digital textbooks, including artificial intelligence-based textbooks implemented this school year.
shinjh@heraldcorp.com
Hashtags

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


Korea Herald
2 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Ador appoints new CEO as legal fight with NewJeans drags on
K-pop agency names third CEO in under four years Ador, a music label under Hybe and home to NewJeans, said Wednesday it has named Lee Do-kyong as its new CEO, replacing Kim Ju-young after just one year. The label said Lee's appointment reflects a pivot toward reinforcing the agency's role in planning and managing artists' music and performances. Lee was previously vice president of Hybe's IPX division, which develops artist IP-based businesses such as merchandising, licensing and fan experiences. The outgoing Kim, a former HR executive, was appointed in August 2024 following the ouster of founding head Min Hee-jin, who remains in a legal dispute with Hybe over stock options following an alleged attempt to seize control of the subsidiary. 'Having deemed the previous restructuring goals achieved, the board is now moving to an operational model focused on quickly supporting artists' activities and driving business expansion,' Ador said in a statement. Lee joined Hybe (then Big Hit Entertainment) in 2019 and helped steer corporate vision, business strategy and new ventures. In 2022, she took charge of IPX to oversee merchandising, including pop-up stores and light stick operations. Lee also spearheaded 'The City,' a large-scale project that extended fan experiences across entire cities where Hybe artist concerts were being held. With Lee at the helm, Ador says it has built a more agile structure to support its roster. The label manages girl group NewJeans — currently in a contractual dispute with Hybe — and in June launched the '2025 Ador Boys Global Audition' to recruit members for a next-generation boy band.


Korea Herald
3 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Kim Jong-un issues inter-Korean policy rejecting Seoul's olive branch
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un on Tuesday conveyed his inter-Korean policy plan through his sister Kim Yo-jong, who handed it down during a meeting with key Foreign Ministry officials while denouncing Seoul's olive-branch offer as 'deceptive,' state media reported Wednesday. Seoul swiftly rejected the charge. The presidential office said, "It is regrettable that a North Korean official distorts and misrepresents our sincere efforts." President Lee Jae Myung's office also pledged to "move beyond an era of hostility and confrontation, restore mutual trust, and open a new era of peaceful coexistence and joint growth on the Korean Peninsula." North Korea's latest statement was part of a series of high-level pronouncements that zeroed in on what it labeled a "contradiction" in the Lee administration's conciliatory inter-Korean policy — pointing to the ongoing Ulchi Freedom Shield exercise between South Korea and the US. Kim Yo-jong, vice department director of the Party Central Committee, 'conveyed and assigned the head of state's foreign policy plan at a consultative meeting with director generals of the Foreign Ministry,' state-run Korean Central News Agency reported Wednesday in a Korean-language dispatch. At the same time, Kim 'sharply criticized the essence of the Republic of Korea government's deceptive 'appeasement offensive' and its two-faced nature,' KCNA added, referring to South Korea by its official name. 'Clarifying once again on this occasion, the ROK cannot become our state's diplomatic counterpart,' Kim was quoted as saying in the KCNA report. 'The DPRK Foreign Ministry must properly seek accurate countermeasures regarding relations with the most hostile state and with the states that listen to its agitation, based on the conclusion of our head of state, who pointed out the true nature of the ROK," Kim said. DPRK stands for North Korea's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. KCNA reported that Kim Yo-jong "analyzed Seoul's behavior of pretending as if the ROK's policy toward the DPRK is making a 'rapid U-turn'" during the meeting. Kim specifically dismissed President Lee's Aug. 15 National Liberation Day speech, in which Lee pledged to respect the North Korean system, not to pursue unification by absorption and clarified South Korea's intent not to conduct any hostile acts. Then, Kim denounced the Lee administration for 'parroting' its predecessors' rhetoric by describing the annual combined military exercises between South Korea and the United States as defensive in nature. 'This is a passage that vividly reflects the double-faced character of the Seoul authorities, whose inside and outside are different," Kim was quoted as saying in the KCNA report. "Whoever in the ROK it may be, one must not forget the fact that they are America's top-class running dog.' Mounting pressure before Lee-Trump summit Lim Eul-chul, a professor at Kyungnam University's Institute for Far Eastern Studies in Seoul, assessed that 'Kim Yo-jong's core message is essentially a propaganda line.' 'The point is that as long as the South Korean government remains subordinate to the US, it cannot create a new history of sustainable and peaceful inter-Korean relations," Lim said. 'North Korea is seeking to push the Lee Jae Myung administration into making a more drastic shift from its hostile policy toward the North — including the suspension of ROK-US military exercises — by exerting maximum pressure on the administration.' The latest remarks followed Kim Jong-un's order — issued Monday, the first day of the Ulchi Freedom Shield regular exercises between South Korea and the US — calling for a rapid nuclear buildup and denouncing the combined drills. On Aug. 14, Kim Yo-jong had similarly criticized the exercises, claiming that the Lee administration's policy toward North Korea 'has not changed in the least and cannot change.' The string of denunciatory statements comes ahead of the first summit between President Lee and US President Donald Trump on Aug. 25 in Washington. Lim further explained that the outcomes of the Lee-Trump summit 'are expected to have a significant impact on inter-Korean relations.' 'The key question is whether the results will show weakened dependence on the US and greater diplomatic autonomy vis-a-vis the US,' Lim said. 'However, North Korea is likely well aware of the structural constraints and dilemmas the Lee administration faces.'


Korea Herald
5 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Indoor temperatures in S. Korean prison cells topped 30 C during July heat wave: disclosure
South Korea's prisons sweltered in extreme heat earlier this summer, with newly released data showing inmates were confined in cells that stayed above 30 degrees Celsius for much of July's record-breaking heatwave. Information disclosed by the Ministry of Justice, after a request from three human rights groups, revealed that from July 1 to 10, nearly all of the nation's 55 correctional facilities reported indoor temperatures above 30 degrees. At Seoul Detention Center, for example, the temperature on July 10 measured 32 degrees at 6 a.m. and rose slightly higher later in the day, even exceeding the outdoor morning temperature. The Korea Meteorological Administration confirmed that early July was the hottest on record, with national averages reaching 28.2 degrees and Seoul peaking at 37.8 degrees. Most inmates are housed in cells without air conditioning. Only medical wards are equipped with cooling units, while standard blocks rely on ceiling fans that automatically shut off every hour to prevent overheating. Crowded conditions mean body heat drives indoor temperatures even higher. The World Health Organization advises keeping daytime rooms below 32 degrees and nights below 24 degrees to reduce health risks. South Korea's own Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency recommends 26-28 degrees. Records showed at least seven inmates were treated for heat-related illnesses, including exhaustion, but some institutions declined to provide figures. No deaths were reported, yet the inconsistent disclosure was described by advocates as a significant transparency problem. Seoul Detention Center is where former President Yoon Suk Yeol is currently being held. He was returned to custody on July 10 after a court approved a detention warrant in an investigation into his Dec. 3 martial law imposition. Yoon is confined under standard intake procedures in a solitary cell that, like other ordinary blocks at the facility, has no air conditioning. Die-hard supporters of the impeached leader have called the lack of air conditioning in his cell a human rights abuse, urging the Justice Ministry to install cooling equipment. It was revealed, however, by Democratic Party lawmakers that Yoon was allowed to spend a total of 53 hours and 53 minutes between July 10-29 in air-conditioned reception areas, exclusively for himself and his guests. In 2019, the National Human Rights Commission of Korea recommended that the government establish legal standards for appropriate indoor temperatures in correctional facility cells. However, the Ministry of Justice responded that it would be difficult to set binding indoor temperature standards as the issue is linked to mid- to long-term challenges such as overcrowding and overall facility conditions. The three groups that demanded the information disclosure are Lawyers for a Democratic Society (Minbyun), the Catholic Human Rights Committee and Korean Lawyers for Public Interest and Human Rights.