Gulf Times

South Korea’s Lee wins ruling party primary

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Lee Jae-myung became the presidenti­al candidate for South Korea’s ruling party yesterday, hoping to overcome a property scandal and gather national support.

Lee, governor of Gyeonggi province and a party outsider often critical of incumbent President Moon Jae-in, sealed his victory in the primary to represent the Democratic Party in the March 9 presidenti­al election.

Moon cannot stand for reelection under Korean law.

The leading contender among a fractured field from the main conservati­ve People Power Party, Yoon Seok-youl, has been caught up in scandals of his own — including murky ties to an acupunctur­ist — and criticism he relies on fortune-tellers.

“It used to be at most a single candidate who had such scandals, but the top two frontrunne­rs are both embroiled in scandals in this election, which shows South Korea is regressing politicall­y,” Lee Jun-han, professor of political science at Incheon National University.

Lee secured 50.29% of the votes in an 11-round primary that ended yesterday.

His closest rival and initially the establishm­ent favourite, former prime minister Lee Nakyon, finished with 39.14%. His outsider image was once seen as a liability in the face of establishm­ent competitor­s with closer ties to the outgoing Moon, but Lee rose to prominence with an aggressive pandemic response and a populist economic agenda.

Dogged by a scandal involving a residentia­l developmen­t plan when he was mayor of Seongnam in 2015, Lee used his acceptance speech to pledge progress on policy issues, including a push for universal basic income and more affordable housing amid skyrocketi­ng property prices.

Next year’s election represents “the ultimate battle against the corrupt establishm­ent,” he said.

Prosecutor­s and police have been investigat­ing the Seongnam project amid controvers­y over Lee’s ties to a former official, who has been arrested on corruption charges related to the deal.

Lee has denied any wrongdoing. His office did not respond to requests for comment.

Housing-related scandals are a particular sore spot for voters in South Korea, where home prices have soared beyond the reach of many.

Lee’s party has been damaged by allegation­s of property speculatio­n. On the other side, conservati­ve Yoon — a former top prosecutor who joined the opposition after gaining prominence during a political fight with President Moon — was forced in a televised debate last week to distance himself from an unlicensed acupunctur­ist.

 ?? ?? Democratic Party’s Gyeonggi governor Lee Jae-myung speaks during the final race for presidenti­al election candidate in Seoul, South Korea, yesterday.
Democratic Party’s Gyeonggi governor Lee Jae-myung speaks during the final race for presidenti­al election candidate in Seoul, South Korea, yesterday.

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