The Korea Times

DPK chief picked most favored candidate for next president

- By Jun Ji-hye jjh@koreatimes.co.kr

Rep. Lee Jae-myung, the chairman of the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea (DPK), came in first in a poll on potential presidenti­al candidates for the 2027 race, boasting unabated support from liberal voters despite the ongoing risk stemming from various criminal allegation­s against him.

In a poll of 1,002 Korean adults aged 18 or above, 28 percent of respondent­s picked Lee as their preferred presidenti­al candidate, followed closely by Han Dong-hoon, interim leader of the ruling People Power Party (PPP), at 25 percent.

The poll was commission­ed by The Korea Times to gauge public sentiment ahead of the April 10 general elections and was conducted by Hankook Research on Monday and Tuesday.

The voter preference for Lee was manifested clearly among supporters of progressiv­e and liberal opposition parties, as he was chosen by 66 percent of DPK supporters, 61 percent of the minor progressiv­e Jinbo Party supporters and 56 percent of the National Innovation Party supporters. The National Innovation Party is led by Cho Kuk, former justice minister during the liberal Moon Jaein administra­tion.

Lee faces a series of criminal allegation­s for which he has been standing trial in several cases. This includes a scandal-ridden land developmen­t project in Daejang-dong, a neighborho­od of Seongnam, Gyeonggi Province, which occurred while he was the mayor of the city from 2010 to 2018.

State prosecutor­s attempted to arrest the opposition leader twice — the first request was overridden in February 2023 when the DPK-controlled National Assembly voted down a motion for his arrest.

The second attempt was approved by the Assembly in September of the same year but a court denied the prosecutio­n’s request, citing a lack of direct evidence and other reasons.

At the time, Prosecutor General Lee Oneseok vowed to conduct further investigat­ions into the criminal allegation­s against Lee.

The PPP’s Han came second in the poll with 25 percent support, garnering relatively high popularity for his short political career.

Han, a close aide to President Yoon Suk Yeol, was appointed Yoon’s first justice minister in May 2022 and stepped down from the position in December 2023 after accepting the ruling party’s proposal to chair its emergency leadership committee in the lead-up to the general elections.

In the poll, 19 percent responded that they support nobody as a candidate for the next president, indicating that a large number of swing voters may have a greater impact on the next presidenti­al election.

Daegu Mayor Hong Joon-pyo, the outspoken conservati­ve politician who ran in the 2017 presidenti­al election, losing to former President Moon, had 4 percent support, while former Justice Minister Cho, Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon and former Prime Minister Lee Nak-yon each garnered 3 percent.

Lee Nak-yon, who had served as the DPK chairman, left the party amid factional disputes and formed a new party called the Saemirae Party.

Lee Joon-seok, a former PPP chairman who now heads the newly formed Reform Party, marked 1 percent support.

The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points, with a credibilit­y rate of 95 percent. Further details are available on the National Election Survey Deliberati­on Commission’s website.

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