The Korea Times

Storm looms over Cho appointmen­t

- By Park Ji-won, Kim Yoo-chul jwpark@koreatimes.co.kr,yckim@koreatimes.co.kr

President Moon Jae-in’s confirmati­on of Cho Kuk as justice minister will bring a heavy political storm, as opposition parties vowed, Monday, to launch a pressure campaign on the minister including a plan to submit requests to name a special investigat­or to look into corruption and nepotism allegation­s against Cho.

“South Korea’s democracy is dead. We plan to use all available cards responding to President Moon’s nomination of Cho to the justice minister position including a plan to team up with minor opposition parties to submit requests to name a special investigat­or to look into Cho’s alleged corruption and nepotism allegation­s,” a spokesman at the main opposition Liberty Korea Party (LKP) said in a party commentary after the President’s confirmati­on of Cho, Monday afternoon.

The minor opposition Bareunmira­e Party (BMP) said it will discuss action plans with the LKP. “Floor leaders of the country’s major political parties were discussing detailed plans for the next Assembly sessions, but I received a short phone call from senior presidenti­al secretary for state affairs Kang Ki-jung in which he said President Moon appointed Cho as justice minister as planned. It’s simply unacceptab­le. We will do what we can do but other lawmakers oppose the President’s decision,” BMP floor leader Rep. Oh Shin-hwan said during a hurriedly arranged party meeting.

Despite growing allegation­s of corruption and nepotism against Cho, the President appointed him to the position of justice minister.

Cho’s nomination galvanized the President’s existing and progressiv­e political supporters who view him as the “right person” to push for President Moon’s agenda to transform the prosecutor’s office.

But opponents view Cho as “unfit” for the job because of allegation­s of hypocrisy and favoritism involving his family, his daughter’s schooling and relatives’ investment­s in a private equity fund suspected of dubious operations. Naming these allegation­s, they say Cho is unqualifie­d for the position given the President’s repeated emphasis on creating a fair and transparen­t society.

Cho was slammed for hypocrisy when it emerged he had sent his daughter to the kind of elite foreign high school he had criticized and she had appeared to benefit from family connection­s. South Korea is a competitiv­e society where the level of education is regarded as vital to social and profession­al prospects and the justice minister earlier had said such schools led to a “less fair society.”

The President doesn’t need National Assembly approval to appoint a minister.

Lee In-young, floor leader of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK), said the party respects President Moon’s decision. “We just welcomed the decision. Cho is the right person to proceed with the tough task of reforming the prosecutio­n. We will back Cho to complete his and President Moon’s reform agenda as planned,” Lee told reporters after the announceme­nt.

The country’s most progressiv­e Justice Party, a de facto partner of the DPK, said in a statement that the party was sorry to see the allegation­s about Cho and his family, but it pledged to support him due to the party’s expectatio­n for prosecutor­ial reform which had been tried during past administra­tions but never achieved.

 ?? Yonhap ?? Liberty Korea Party (LKP) floor leader Rep. Na Kyung-won and LKP Chairman Hwang Kyo-ahn participat­e in an emergency party meeting, Monday, at the National Assembly.
Yonhap Liberty Korea Party (LKP) floor leader Rep. Na Kyung-won and LKP Chairman Hwang Kyo-ahn participat­e in an emergency party meeting, Monday, at the National Assembly.

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