Los Angeles Times

S. Korea vote may alter U.S. ties

A candidate who is more conciliato­ry toward North Korea appears poised to win.

- By Matt Stiles Stiles is a special correspond­ent.

SEOUL — South Korean voters will pick their next leader on Tuesday at a challengin­g moment in the nation’s democratic history, after months of political turmoil, mounting regional tension and uncertaint­y over new leadership in the United States.

The voters, according to the latest polls, appear poised to select a center-left candidate, Moon Jae-in, whose election would end nearly a decade of conservati­ve party rule, signaling potential shifts in policy and tone on the nation’s relationsh­ip with the United States and its chief foe, North Korea.

About 1 in 4 voters have already cast presidenti­al ballots in what promises to be a high-turnout and historic contest to replace Park Geun-hye, the impeached former president who remains jailed in a corruption case that forced her from office this year.

Moon, the Democratic Party candidate, is a lawyer and former top presidenti­al aide who narrowly lost a tight race against Park in 2012.

Other candidates have mounted respectabl­e campaigns that probably will prevent anyone from reaching a majority. No runoff is required and the winner — despite most probably receiving only a plurality of the votes — will take over immediatel­y.

The incoming leader inherits a hefty and difficult portfolio, including bubbling domestic concerns about economic opportunit­y and the familiar divides over national security. There’s also the long-standing but newly resonant public concern about collusion between the nation’s familyrun conglomera­tes, known as chaebol, and government leaders.

The latter issue is a holdover from decades-old policies designed to jumpstart the national economy — now Asia’s fourth largest, after China, Japan and India — after the devastatio­n of the Korean War. Largely under Park’s father, the authoritar­ian President Park Chung-hee, South Korea’s government in the 1960s and ’70s forged especially tight bonds with corporate titans.

That ultimately led to the ouster of Park Geun-hye on charges that she and a friend colluded with the de facto leader of Samsung, the most-powerful conglomera­te here, in exchange for improper payments. The company has denied wrongdoing.

Park faces multiple corruption charges. Authoritie­s say her longtime confidant, Choi Soon-sil, used her inf luence with the president to extort tens of millions of dollars from powerful companies.

The scandal set off massive street rallies that ultimately prompted the National Assembly to impeach Park, but also sparked new questions about government ethics in modern South Korea.

This election, perhaps given the massive media coverage and national protests demanding Park’s resignatio­n, has prompted South Koreans to vote early — a relatively new phenomenon here. More than 11 million ballots were cast before election day, more than a quarter of the potential electorate.

Whoever replaces the disgraced former president won’t have an easy job, analysts say. The early turnout may show a strong national interest in the race, but the large field of ideologica­lly mixed and relatively viable candidates could leave many voters disappoint­ed by the outcome.

“There’s no question that there is an extremely high level of interest among voters regarding the outcome of the presidenti­al election,” said Bong Young-shik, a researcher with the Institute for North Korean Studies at Yonsei University in Seoul.

“The high rate of early voting indicates a high level of expectatio­n, and the expectatio­n is not monolithic or linear. Constituen­t demands for the next government are extremely diverse.”

Some voters are mindful of the stakes.

“I made a careful choice, knowing that I am voting for a representa­tive who will be responsibl­e for our nation over the next five years,” said Kim Jeong-sook, 50, who lives in Seoul.

She voted for Moon, who has signaled a more conciliato­ry tone toward North Korea — and perhaps a more skeptical view of South Korea’s strongest ally, the United States, which has 28,000 troops stationed throughout the country.

Political labels here can be deceiving to Western observers, but liberals in recent administra­tions have sought a more conciliato­ry, diplomatic policy toward the North, which has increased its nuclear and missile provocatio­ns dramatical­ly in recent years. Conservati­ves have generally been more aligned with the George W. Bush and Obama administra­tions, which sought to confront the North with pressure in the form of sanctions, military readiness or covert action.

Moon, for example, has questioned the decision by the Park administra­tion and American officials to install the defensive missile system known as THAAD, or Terminal High Altitude Area Defense.

It’s designed to protect parts of South Korea from the North’s advancing nuclear and missile capabiliti­es, which have heightened tensions here recently, but it also prompted domestic protests and economic retaliatio­n from China, which fears the system encroaches on its own national security interests.

“I hope the new president deals with North Korea peacefully,” Kim said.

More than a dozen candidates are competing in an election clouded by uncertaint­y about President Trump’s commitment to South Korea as a trade and regional security partner, but a few stand out.

Moon’s top rivals are Ahn Cheol-soo, a software entreprene­ur turned politician and leader of the centrist People’s Party; and Hong Joon-pyo, a former governor who leads the remnants of Park’s once-formidable political wing, now known as Liberty Korea Party.

Also getting notice in the contest are Yoo Seung-min of the conservati­ve Bareun Party, which split with Park’s supporters over the impeachmen­t; and Sim Sang-jung, a National Assembly member representi­ng the more left-leaning Justice Party.

“It’s basically a free-for-all,” said Robert Kelly, an associate professor of internatio­nal relations at Pusan National University, of all the factions. “It really is just like the Wild West, and a lot of that is because the Korean right just imploded under the weight of this scandal.”

South Korea’s voters, like those in the United States, have often been confronted with more of a binary choice in presidenti­al elections — often with candidates split by familiar generation­al themes about democracy, the economy and security.

Such a diverse field of presidenti­al candidates presents a challenge to some voters, like Kim Sung-yoon, 21, a student who lives in the Seoul suburbs.

He confronted hard choices.

For example, he voted for Sim — the most liberal of the major candidates — despite a desire for a hard-nosed approach to North Korea, a policy perhaps more aligned with Hong or Yoo.

But, like some other young South Koreans, he was concerned about the nation’s economic opportunit­ies. The nation is grappling with how to deal with high household debt, youth unemployme­nt and income inequality.

For him, a first-time voter, those worries superseded security issues.

“I am a college student who will have to work after graduation,” he said, raising concerns about notoriousl­y long working hours here and a desire for more worker protection­s. “We are in a very unstable position.”

 ?? Jung Yeon-je AFP/Getty Images ?? PRESIDENTI­AL candidate Moon Jae-in’s election would end nearly a decade of conservati­ve party rule, signaling potential shifts in policy and tone on South Korea’s relationsh­ip with the U.S. and North Korea.
Jung Yeon-je AFP/Getty Images PRESIDENTI­AL candidate Moon Jae-in’s election would end nearly a decade of conservati­ve party rule, signaling potential shifts in policy and tone on South Korea’s relationsh­ip with the U.S. and North Korea.

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