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South Korean presidential election, 2017

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9 May 2017
  
2022 →

Location
  
South Korea

South Korean presidential election, 2017

The 19th South Korean presidential election is scheduled to be held on 9 May 2017, after the impeachment and dismissal of incumbent Park Geun-hye. Under present law, the election will be decided in a single round on a first-past-the-post basis.

Contents

The election was originally scheduled to be held on or before 20 December 2017, but was moved after the decision of the Constitutional Court to uphold the parliament's impeachment of Park Geun-hye. In the meantime, Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn succeeded Park as acting president and will finish out the remainder of the 18th term. Acting president Hwang has indicated he will not run for a term in his own right.

Background

Park Geun-hye of the conservative Saenuri Party won the previous presidential election in 2012, succeeding Lee Myung-bak of the same party.

The Saenuri Party lost the parliamentary election in April 2016, with opposition parties including liberal Democratic Party of Korea and People's Party winning a majority in the National Assembly. Commentators described the result as leaving Park a lame duck president, as she may not run again under South Korea's one-term presidency rule. and the Nikkei Asian Review noted that, in the wake of her "crushing defeat", "rivals sense a prime opportunity to complete the power shift in the December 2017 presidential vote". The Korea Times stated: "The drama of deals and power struggles for next year's election has already begun."

Impeachment processes

On 9 December 2016 Park was impeached by parliament by a vote of 234 for and 56 against (with seven invalid votes and two abstentions). The Constitutional Court reviewed the motion of impeachment. Park was formally removed from office, with a unanimous ruling by all eight of the Constitutional Court's justices supporting her impeachment, on 10 March 2017. A presidential election must now be held within 60 days. In the interim, Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn succeeds Park and will see out the remainder of the 18th term.

Democratic Party

  • Moon Jae-in, former party chairman (2015–16), member of the National Assembly for Busan (2012–16), 2012 Democratic United Party presidential candidate
  • Ahn Hee-jung, Governor of South Chungcheong Province (2010–present)
  • Choi Sung, Mayor of Goyang (2010–present), former member of the National Assembly for Goyang (2004–08)
  • Lee Jae-myung, Mayor of Seongnam (2010–present)
  • Liberty Korea Party

  • Lee In-je, member of the National Assembly (1988-2016)
  • Hong Jun-pyo, incumbent governor of South Gyeongsang Province (2012–present)
  • Kim Kwan-yong, incumbent Governor of North Gyeongsang Province (2006-present)
  • Kim Jin-tae, member of the National Assembly for Chuncheon (2012-present)
  • People's Party

  • Ahn Cheol-soo, former party co-chairman (2016), former co-chairman of the New Politics Alliance for Democracy (March–July 2014), withdrawn presidential candidate in 2012, founder of AhnLab, Inc., member of the National Assembly for Nowon District (2013–present)
  • Sohn Hak-kyu, former member of the National Assembly for Seongnam (2011–12), former Governor of Gyeonggi Province (2002–06), former assemblyman for Gwangmyeong (1993–98, 2000–02)
  • Park Joo-seon, deputy speaker of the National Assembly (2016-present), member of the National Assembly (2000-2004, 2008-present)
  • Bareun Party

  • Nam Kyung-pil, 34th Governor of Gyeonggi Province (2014~)
  • Yoo Seong-min, member of the National Assembly for Daegu (2004~)
  • Justice Party

  • Sim Sang-jung, Chairperson of the Justice Party (2015–present), member of the National Assembly for Goyang (2004- 2008, 2012–present)
  • Potential candidates

    The five parties represented in the National Assembly are the ruling conservative Liberty Korea Party, the liberal Democratic Party of Korea, the centrist People's Party, the newly established conservative Bareun Party, and the progressive Justice Party. Potential candidates are listed below by their present party-political affiliation.

    Christian Liberal Party

  • Son Yeong-gu
  • Nonpartisan

  • Kim Chong-in, interim party chairman of the Democratic Party of Korea (2016), party list member of the National Assembly (1981–88, 1992–94, 2004–08, 2016–2017)
  • Declined

  • Hwang Kyo-ahn, incumbent acting President (2016–present), Prime Minister (2015–present), former Minister of Justice (2013–15) announced that he would not be running for the presidency on 15 March 2017.
  • Kim Boo-kyum, member of the National Assembly for Daegu (2016–present), former member for Gunpo (2000–12), announced that he would not be running for the presidency on 7 February 2017.
  • Ban Ki-moon, Secretary-General of the United Nations (2007–2016), was considering running as a non-partisan candidate but announced on 1 February 2017 that he would not be running for the presidency.
  • Park Won-soon, Mayor of Seoul (2011–present), announced that he would not be running for the presidency on 26 January 2017.
  • Oh Se-hoon, former Mayor of Seoul (2006-2011), announced that he would not be running for the presidency on 13 January 2017.
  • Kim Moo-sung, former Chairman of the Saenuri Party (2014-2016), announced that he would not be running for the presidency on 24 November 2016.
  • References

    South Korean presidential election, 2017 Wikipedia