The Korea Times

Yoon, Biden expected to benefit from stronger alliance

- By Nam Hyun-woo namhw@koreatimes.co.kr

The summit between South Korea and the U.S. may play a role in shaping positive public opinion for Presidents Yoon Suk-yeol and Joe Biden in elections that will be held in their two countries.

The two leaders held talks Saturday to reaffirm the allies’ stronger commitment to partnershi­ps in security and the economy. The Korea-U.S. summit tool place ahead of the June 1 local elections here in which mayors, governors, city council members and superinten­dents will be elected.

In that respect, the summit could play a role in boosting the ruling People Power Party (PPP).

South Koreans’ awareness of national security is strengthen­ing amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and North Korea’s escalating missile and nuclear weapons threats. Against this backdrop, the two leaders’ strong message on the Seoul-Washington alliance will likely have a positive impact on voters, pundits said.

“Every summit between Seoul and Washington has been a plus for the ruling side, because all messages coming out of the talks are about strengthen­ing bilateral ties and hopes of overcoming pending challenges,” an official at the ruling party said. “This time, security concerns stemming from North Korea and Ukraine are also turning voter sentiment toward the ruling side.”

In 2018, then-South Korean President Moon Jae-in held a summit with his U.S. counterpar­t Donald Trump in Washington, May 22, which this led to the historic U.S.-North Korea summit in Singapore, June 12, a day before South Korea held local elections.

With photos of Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un shaking hands covering the front pages of all newspapers, the then-ruling Democratic Party of Korea clinched a landslide victory, claiming 14 out of 17 provincial governor and metropolit­an city mayor posts.

For President Biden, the summit is also a chance to resuscitat­e his faltering support rate before the U.S. midterm elections in November.

During his visit to Samsung Electronic­s Pyeongtaek Campus in Gyeonggi Province, Friday, Biden was briefed about the semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing process by an American engineer from KLA, a U.S. semiconduc­tor firm and supplier of Samsung.

Biden told the engineer, Peter: “You may live here, but don’t forget to vote.” It was interprete­d as a remark referring to the U.S. midterm elections slated for Nov. 8, as Biden is paying greater attention to the elections despite being on his first trip to Asia as U.S. president. Biden moved on to use his visit to the semiconduc­tor plant as a moment for canvassing. During his speech at the plant, Biden made the case for how Samsung’s investment in the U.S. will create American jobs, as well as stressing foreign companies’ partnershi­ps with “our most highly skilled and dedicated and engaged workers you can find anywhere in the world: American union members.”

Biden’s remarks were seen as an effort to find a rebound from a deepening pessimism about his presidency and the Democratic Party. According to a poll from the Associated PressNORC Center for Public Research announced hours after Biden’s speech, only 39 percent of U.S. adults approve of his performanc­e as president, the lowest level in his presidency so far.

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