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Lee holds 1st Cabinet meeting with Yoon's ministers
Lee holds 1st Cabinet meeting with Yoon's ministers

Korea Herald

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Korea Herald

Lee holds 1st Cabinet meeting with Yoon's ministers

Lee drops Han's Constitutional Court judge nominations; call with Trump being arranged, according to spokesperson President Lee Jae-myung held the first Cabinet meeting of his term on Thursday, where he asked ministers and heads of agencies, all appointed by his predecessor Yoon Suk Yeol, to do their best while they are in office. "We need to put people first, and do the best we can at the given moment," Lee told Cabinet members at the meeting at the presidential office in Yongsan, central Seoul. "Of course, some of you might feel this is quite awkward, but at the end of the day, we all work for the people. We cannot make light of the responsibilities entrusted upon us by the people, and I trust you to do your best." As Lee was elected in a by-election after Yoon was impeached and removed from office, the president did not have a transition period following Tuesday's election. He begins his term with Cabinet members appointed by the last administration. "It will take some time before I get the administration in order. While I do that, people are going through a difficult time, and I'd like to make that time shorter as much as I can," Lee said. Later in the day, Lee's spokesperson, Kang Yu-jung, said the president dropped nominations for Constitutional Court justices made by former Prime Minister Han Duck-soo while he was acting president. Han nominated Government Legislation Minister Lee Wan-kyu and Seoul High Court Justice Ham Sang-hun to succeed two outgoing Constitutional Court justices. The Democratic Party had slammed Han when he made the appointments, saying an acting president should not have the same authority as an elected president to fill such vacancies. A call is being arranged between US President Donald Trump and Lee, according to Kang. "For now, we are in the process of coordinating the phone call. We cannot confirm anything at this stage," she told reporters. The US Congressional Korea Caucus congratulated Lee on his election victory. In a statement Thursday, co-chairs of the Congressional Korea Caucus, Reps. Ami Bera, Marilyn Strickland, Joe Wilson and Mike Kelly, said they wished Lee and his administration well to "lead the Republic of Korea, a key and indispensable ally, through the many challenges facing the Korean Peninsula and beyond." 'As co-chairs of the Korea Caucus, we remain steadfastly committed to defending, strengthening, and enlarging the ironclad US-Korea alliance," they said. Questions remain whether Lee, who had been battling simultaneous criminal trials before he was elected, will continue to attend his court cases as a sitting president. The Supreme Court on Thursday confirmed a jail sentence of seven years and eight months for Lee's deputy dating to when he was Gyeonggi Province governor for the illegal transfer of funds to North Korea. The $8 million, the court said, were sent to North Korea to facilitate Lee's visit to Pyongyang. Lee has denied involvement in or knowledge of the scheme. The Democratic Party of Korea says the courts must suspend Lee's criminal trials. "Since he has assumed office as president, his criminal cases ought to be suspended under the Constitution. This is not a matter of debate," Rep. Jo Seoung-lae, the party's chief spokesperson, said Thursday. Article 84 of the Constitution says incumbent presidents are immune from criminal prosecution, but it does not state what should happen to criminal trials that are already underway. According to exit polls, 64 percent of voters said they believe Lee's criminal trials should continue even if he became president, while 26 percent said they should be delayed until after his term as president. On the day of his inauguration Wednesday, Lee announced the first set of nominations for key positions. Lee plucked Kim Min-seok from the Democratic Party leadership to serve as prime minister and named Kang Hoon-sik, a three-time Democratic Party lawmaker, as his chief of staff. As for his national security team, the president tapped Lee Jong-seok, who was unification minister for the late President Roh Moo-hyun, for director of the National Intelligence Service, and Wi Sung-lac, who was ambassador to Russia, for director of the National Security Office. Cabinet members have to go through a confirmation hearing and be confirmed by the National Assembly before they are appointed. Lee won the presidential election Tuesday with 49.42 percent of the vote against 41.15 percent that went to his People Power Party opponent Kim Moon-soo.

DP shifts into election mode, launches Lee Jae-myung campaign team
DP shifts into election mode, launches Lee Jae-myung campaign team

Korea Herald

time30-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Korea Herald

DP shifts into election mode, launches Lee Jae-myung campaign team

The center-left Democratic Party of Korea officially went into election mode by announcing major hires for its new election campaign committee Wednesday with a focus on "social unity." Among the high-profile hires for Lee campaign are conservative figures including Yoon Yeo-joon, former environment minister during the Kim Young-sam administration in the late 1990s; and Lee Seok-yeon, former Minister of Government Legislation under the Lee Myung-bak administration in the late 2000s. Yoon, 85, will serve as the standing co-chair of Lee's campaign team along with floor leader Rep. Park Chan-dae. Also joining Lee's camp are former three-term conservative lawmakers Lee In-ki and Kwon Oh-eul. The two former lawmakers and Lee Seok-yeon will lead the subcommittee directly under Lee that will be tasked with national cohesion. Besides, figures who were formerly parts of liberal administrations, such as Kang Kum-sil, former justice minister; Jung Eun-kyeong, former commissioner of the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency; Kim Boo-kyum, former prime minister and Kim Kyoung-soo, former governor of South Gyeongsang Province who contended with Lee in the recent party primary, also joined as nonstanding co-chairs of Lee's campaign team. Kim Dong-myeong, who leads the Federation of Korean Trade Unions, was also recruited as co-chair of the Lee campaign committee. Wednesday's first round of announcement for the Lee campaign recruits was meant to highlight a need for bringing South Korean society together as a community to overcome economic and social setbacks in the aftermath of the martial law crisis that erupted in December, according to the party, which holds 170 parliamentary seats out of 300 at the National Assembly. "Rather than being ideologically moderate, conservative or progressive, we are pursuing an election campaign committee to achieve unity in society for South Korea's (next) leap forward," said Rep. Kim Yun-duck, a three-term lawmaker who serves as the secretary general of the Democratic Party, in a briefing before the campaign launch. Kim added the party's election campaign committee will "hear the voices of people in every neighborhood alley" to devise election campaign promises. The party's announcement also suggested that the Lee campaign team will have 15 subcommittees directly under the auspices of Lee, including ones dedicated to demographic challenges, artificial intelligence technologies, climate change, Korean culture, balanced development and smart defense technology, among others. Also, 35 more subcommittees combined under the Lee campaign team will deal with four pillars of the Lee campaign, namely supporting people's livelihoods, reducing economic inequality, promoting peace on the Korean Peninsula and achieving futuristic national goals. On Sunday, Rep. Lee Jae-myung became the Democratic Party's presidential nominee as he cumulatively won 89.77 percent of votes throughout the primary nationwide. Lee is on his third attempt to run for president. The 61-year-old lost to former President Yoon Suk Yeol in the 2022 election by the smallest margin since the country's democratization in 1987: 0.73 percentage points.

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