The Korea Herald

Korea enters full election mode

Loudspeake­rs, posters permitted until eve of election day

- By Son Ji-hyoung (consnow@heraldcorp.com)

South Korea shifted into fullscale election mode Thursday, with political parties launching their official campaigns to stretch until the general election on April 10 that is expected to shape the political landscape for the next four years.

For the next 13 days, eligible candidates representi­ng their parties are allowed to use loudspeake­rs and trucks with megaphones for campaignin­g activities in open spaces from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m., according to the National Election Commission on Thursday. The trucks may continue campaignin­g activity until 11 p.m., as long as the loudspeake­rs are turned off by 9 p.m.

Candidates and their supporters may don sashes on their shoulders and hold placards to indicate the candidate.

Campaign posters displaying images of the candidates with their respective names and assigned numbers on the ballot are being put up at 83,630 locations nationwide. Public debates between candidates are to be broadcast starting Thursday until April 4.

As the period of campaignin­g commences, heads of the parties launched the official campaignin­g activities.

In their visits to endorse party candidates prior to Wednesday, they were not allowed to use loudspeake­rs when speaking to crowds in an open space.

At midnight, the ruling People Power Party’s interim Chair Han Dong-hoon kicked off the campaign period in Garak Market, a wholesale agricultur­al goods market in southern Seoul.

Later Thursday, Han went to multiple districts of Seoul, such as Mapo-gu, Seodaemun-gu, Yongsan-gu and Seongdong-gu, among others, as well as cities in northern Gyeonggi Province, including Namyangju and Uijeongbu.

In Mapo-gu, Han told the public he is “determined to let the criminals face consequenc­es,” referring to Democratic Party of Korea Chair Rep. Lee Jae-myung, who now faces multiple corruption allegation­s, and Cho Kuk, the former justice minister who founded his own party after being convicted of academic fraud.

The party’s Floor Leader Rep. Yun Jae-ok launched his campaignin­g activities in Daegu, a conservati­ve stronghold.

Yun later came to western Seoul districts, such as Yangcheon-gu and Guro-gu, on Thursday afternoon.

The aforementi­oned Democratic Party Chair Rep. Lee started his campaign at his home turf of Gyeyang-gu in Incheon at 7 a.m. by greeting people on their commute to work.

Lee and the party’s Floor Leader Rep. Hong Ihk-pyo met at Yongsan Station in Seoul at 10 a.m. Lee moved on to visit Seoul’s Seongdong-gu and Dongjak-gu, then returned to Incheon later Thursday.

“Consumer prices

are

flying high because the (President Yoon Suk Yeol) administra­tion is incompeten­t, and (Yoon’s) insanity has posed a threat to peace on the Korean Peninsula,” Lee told the crowd at Yongsan Station.

Kim Boo-kyum, a former prime minister during the previous Moon Jae-in administra­tion, rallied support for the Democratic Party’s candidates in southern regions of the Korean Peninsula, including Busan, Changwon and Hadong-gun of South Gyeongsang Province and Gwangyang, South Jeolla Province. Kim now co-heads the Democratic Party’s general election commission.

Some candidates steal the limelight.

Rep. Chung Woon-chun, a candidate representi­ng the People Power Party, shaved his head and locked himself inside a wooden cage cart as he officially kicked off his campaignin­g in Jeonju, North Jeolla Province. Chung is currently serving through the proportion­al representa­tion system, and is running now for direct election.

sought

to

Chung said he felt “great responsibi­lity for my failure to notice Jeonju citizens’ frustratio­n with the Yoon Suk Yeol administra­tion,” and pledged to negotiate with Yoon directly if he is elected to be a threeterm lawmaker representi­ng the Jeonju-B constituen­cy.

Chung, a conservati­ve candidate, is contending with the incumbent Rep. Kang Sung-hee of the minor progressiv­e Jinbo Party and Lee Sung-yoon, a former prosecutor who was recruited by the main opposition Democratic Party, in the liberal stronghold.

The National Assembly has 300 seats in total. Each of the 254 electoral districts across the country will have one lawmaker representi­ng them. As of Saturday, 699 candidates from 21 parties will vie for the 254 directly elected seats in the parliament.

Another 46 seats are up for grabs between 253 candidates from 38 parties, through which lawmakers are elected under the system of proportion­al representa­tion.

 ?? Yonhap ?? Election officials affix posters showing candidates on a wall in the Jongno constituen­cy in Seoul on Thursday, as the official campaignin­g period for the April 10 general election kicked off.
Yonhap Election officials affix posters showing candidates on a wall in the Jongno constituen­cy in Seoul on Thursday, as the official campaignin­g period for the April 10 general election kicked off.

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