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Today: April 19, 2025

South Korean opposition leader Lee opens presidential bid following Yoon's ouster

South Korea Election
April 10, 2025

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) โ€” South Korean opposition leader Lee Jae-myung, widely seen as the front-runner in a presidential by-election triggered by the removal of Yoon Suk Yeol last week, announced his presidential bid Thursday, vowing to heal a starkly divided nation through economic growth.

Lee, who narrowly lost the 2022 election to Yoon, led the liberal Democratic Partyโ€™s campaign to oust the former president over his December declaration of martial law.

Lee recently stepped down as the partyโ€™s chairman to focus on campaigning for the June 3 election. He is considered the clear front-runner in party's primary. Kim Dong-yeon, the Democratic governor of Gyeonggi province and a longtime financial policymaker, also told reporters Wednesday that he intends to run for president.

South Korean opposition leader Lee opens presidential bid following Yoon's ouster
South Korea Election

Yoonโ€™s downfall has left the conservative People Power Party in disarray, with roughly 10 politicians expected to seek the nomination, reflecting a split between Yoon loyalists, who still control the partyโ€™s leadership, and reformists calling for a fresh start.

In a video message, Lee said that Yoonโ€™s martial law saga exposed the countryโ€™s deep divisions and social conflicts, and argued that the root cause was a widening rich-poor gap. He promised aggressive government spending to jolt economic growth and ease income polarization.

โ€œWe have more than we did in the past, but wealth is too concentrated in certain areas,โ€ Lee said. โ€œWith economic growth rates declining worldwide, it has become difficult to maintain and develop an economy solely on the strength of the private sector. However, with government-led talent development and extensive investments in technological research and development, we can revive the economy.โ€

Lee said it was crucial to maintain a robust alliance with the United States and to pursue three-way cooperation with Japan, but he stressed that South Koreaโ€™s national interest should come first in โ€œevery decision.โ€

South Korean opposition leader Lee opens presidential bid following Yoon's ouster
South Korea Election

Lee, who has served as a lawmaker, provincial governor and city mayor, is adored by supporters for his outspoken style and has long positioned himself as an anti-elitist. His critics view him as a populist who stokes division and demonizes conservative opponents while failing to offer realistic funding plans to achieve his ambitious goals.

Kweon Seong-dong, PPP floor leader and a staunch Yoon loyalist, said that if Lee becomes president, he will โ€œruthlessly wield the sword of dogmatism and retributionโ€ and further deepen the countryโ€™s divisions.

Lee also has his own set of legal troubles, facing five different trials for corruption and other criminal charges.

Earlier this month, the Constitutional Court upheld Yoonโ€™s impeachment by the legislature and formally removed him from office over the martial law decree, triggering a presidential by-election within 60 days. The next president will serve a full 5-year term.

Former PPP leader Han Dong-hoon, head of the partyโ€™s anti-Yoon faction, announced his presidential bid Thursday, positioning himself as a conservative who opposed martial law and appealing to centrist voters to stop the inauguration of a populist โ€œmonster governmentโ€ led by Lee. Among the conservativesโ€™ presidential hopefuls, former Labor Minister Kim Moon Soo is considered to be the most pro-Yoon.

Kim, Daegu Mayor Hong Joon-pyo and senior PPP lawmaker Ahn Cheol-soo โ€” a former computer software entrepreneur who finished third in the 2017 presidential vote โ€” have declared their intentions to run for president. Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon is expected to enter the race later.

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