China Daily

Park calls for future leaders to serve two terms

- By AGENCE FRANCEPRES­SE in Seoul

South Korean President Park Geun-hye on Monday called for constituti­onal reforms that could allow future presidents to serve two terms — as she struggles with plunging popularity ratings and a widening corruption scandal.

While its Constituti­on grants enormous power to the executive, South Korea is one of the only economical­ly advanced liberal democracie­s to restrict the presidency to a single five-year term, with no possibilit­y of re-election.

The limit was set back in 1987 as decades of military rule ended, and South Korea sought to preempt any return to extended periods of authoritar­ian control.

Critics said the cap has out lived its use and rendered the executive office perpetuall­y unstable, allowing little time or motivation for consensus building as presidents push hard on legacy issues with no concern about re-election.

During a televised parliament­ary address on Monday, Park called the current Constituti­on outdated and said the government should begin discussion to lay the groundwork for its reform.

Legal straight-jacket

“The constituti­onal fiveyear single term presidency may have been appropriat­e in the past during democratiz­ation,” Park told lawmakers.

“But now it has turned into a jacket that does not fit.”

Without mentioning a specific agenda, Park said she would set up a government committee to push through a constituti­onal revision before the end of her term in early 2018.

Her presidenti­al office stressed that there was no possibilit­y of Park herself running for a second term.

“Under the current constituti­on, the revision will not apply to the current president,” presidenti­al spokesman Kim Dong-Jo said.

The proposal was something of an about-turn for Park, who had previously labeled opposition calls for constituti­onal reform as a “black hole” that would paralyze the government.

Opposition lawmakers questioned whether the president was looking for a high-profile-issue that would deflect attention away from an ongoing corruption probe that threatens to taint the final year of her administra­tion.

South Korean prosecutor­s are currently investigat­ing two of Park’s close aides over allegation­s that they leveraged their relationsh­ip with the president to strong-arm conglomera­tes into multimilli­on dollar donations to two nonprofit foundation­s.

Media reports have suggested the foundation­s were set up to finance Park’s activities after she leaves office.

Park has denied any wrongdoing and ordered a thorough probe and “stern” punishment for anyone involved in illegal activity.

 ??  ?? Park Geun-hye, South Korean president
Park Geun-hye, South Korean president

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