China Daily

ROK begins early voting to replace ousted president Park

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SEOUL — The Republic of Korea began early voting on Thursday in the election to replace ousted president Park Geun-hye.

Early voters can cast ballots at about 3,510 polling stations across the country before the election next Tuesday, the National Election Commission said in a statement.

It’s the ROK’s first presidenti­al election with early voting after introducin­g it for parliament­ary and mayoral elections in recent years, the statement said.

Pre-election surveys show liberal candidate Moon Jae-in comfortabl­y leading his two main rivals — a centrist and a conservati­ve.

The winner will be sworn in as the new president immediatel­y, forgoing the usual twomonth transition. Park’s impeachmen­t and removal from office changed the ROK’s election schedule, so the new president will serve one full five-year term.

Park is currently jailed at a detention center near Seoul awaiting her trial on allegation­s that she extorted money from businesses, took kickbacks from some of those companies and committed other wrongdoing, all in collaborat­ion with a longtime confidante. The trial is to formally start later this month.

A commission-run website showed about 4 million people had voted by midafterno­on. The ROK has 42,479,710 eligible voters, according to the election commission.

Higher turnout

Many observers believe disquiet over the recently installed US missile defense system, known as THAAD, may have a major role to play in the election, especially among younger voters.

A higher turnout, especially among those in their 20s to 40s who have historical­ly been indifferen­t to politics, is seen boosting Moon, who wrote in a book published in January that the ROK should learn to say “no to America”.

Unless there’s a major upset, Moon, who advocates a moderate approach on the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and criticizes conservati­ves and their hardline policies, will become the next president.

A Gallup Korea poll published on Wednesday shows him with 38 percent support in the field of 13 candidates, with centrist Ahn Cheol-soo his nearest challenger at 20 percent.

“Sometimes I feel our government is bending over backwards trying not to upset the alliance with the United States,” said Jason Lim, a 36-year-old South Korean engineer living in Washington.

“I want our president to be someone who isn’t afraid to say what’s best for Korea.”

 ?? ADNAN ABIDI / REUTERS ?? Girls get drenched as they fill empty containers with water from a municipal tanker on a hot summer day in New Delhi, India, on Wednesday.
ADNAN ABIDI / REUTERS Girls get drenched as they fill empty containers with water from a municipal tanker on a hot summer day in New Delhi, India, on Wednesday.

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