The Korea Times

Why supporters ‘walked away’ from DPK

- By Jung Min-ho mj6c2@koreatimes.co.kr

It was a party they trusted only four years ago. When the Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) won 14 out of 17 metropolit­an mayor and governor posts, in the biggest-ever local election victory by any party, some party leaders said that the landslide would be only the beginning of its long reign.

But it wasn’t.

Barring an unpreceden­ted polling error, the liberal DPK is expected to lose at least 10 of the key posts after the June 1 elections.

Some people who voted for the party in previous elections told The Korea Times Tuesday that they have lost trust in it largely due to its incompeten­ce and hypocrisy.

“I will never vote for the DPK, not just this election but ever again,” said Cheong, 31, a Seoul travel company employee who had previously voted only for liberal parties, mostly the DPK. “Housing prices skyrockete­d during the Moon Jae-in government. But the DPK, which has control over both executive and legislatur­e branches and even local offices, has failed to provide any effective solution for the problem.”

Research by the Citizens’ Coalition for Economic Justice, a civic group, shows the average price of a 99-square-meter apartment in Seoul nearly doubled from 620 million won to ($500,000) to 1.19 billion won for the first four years of Moon’s term, starting back in May of 2017, when he was inaugurate­d and pledged that he would stabilize rising property prices.

Cheong said he and many others in their 20s and 30s will have to live with the consequenc­es, and he and his girlfriend have been left without any choice but to delay their marriage.

Jin, 38, a mother of a six-yearold daughter, said she felt betrayed when news broke that Oh Keo-don resigned from the position of Busan mayor disgracefu­lly after sexually assaulting female staffers. It was not the first — nor the last — such crime committed by local government leaders from the DPK in recent years.

Jin, a Seoul resident who had already been dissatisfi­ed with the DPK’s anti-Japan campaign, which negatively affected her Japan-related work, gave up hope on the party.

“It tries to brand itself as a party for women, but who would believe that? The party likes to use women but does little for them,” she said.

“Personally, I was deeply offended by the party’s irresponsi­ble anti-Japan campaign, which it exploited for its political interests. I’m sure many patriotic people felt the same way after their businesses were damaged by it … I also heard from my colleagues when anti-Japan sentiment was running high that Japanese children in certain areas were terrified by protesters on their streets.”

 ?? Korea Times photo by Choi Won-suk ?? From left are Park Ji-hyun, interim co-leader of the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea (DPK), Lee Jae-myung of the DPK who ran in the by-election in Incheon’s Gyeyang District B, Yun Ho-jung, interim co-leader of the party, and its floor leader Park Hong-keun. They look devastated as exit poll results appear on TV at the National Assembly on Wednesday.
Korea Times photo by Choi Won-suk From left are Park Ji-hyun, interim co-leader of the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea (DPK), Lee Jae-myung of the DPK who ran in the by-election in Incheon’s Gyeyang District B, Yun Ho-jung, interim co-leader of the party, and its floor leader Park Hong-keun. They look devastated as exit poll results appear on TV at the National Assembly on Wednesday.

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