The Korea Times

Gwangju mayor in dilemma over Yoon’s visit

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

The mayor of Gwangju is in a dilemma over President Yoon Suk Yeol’s town hall meeting in the city, as the liberal mayor’s previous requests for Yoon to hold the event in Gwangju are being used by the presidenti­al office as a rationale to undermine the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea’s (DPK) criticisms of the president.

The mayor said he will boycott the event if the event is held jointly with South Jeolla Province, which surrounds the city, but questions of his intentions are arising due to his dithering on the issue.

Gwangju Mayor Kang Ki-jung told reporters Monday that he will not attend Yoon’s town hall meeting, if the president insists on “Gwangju and South Jeolla Province jointly holding the event” because “the pending issues in the two regions are completely different.”

Throughout this year, Yoon has been holding town hall meetings across the country, as part of his efforts to pay greater attention to regional issues. So far, the conservati­ve president has held 19 town hall meetings in major cities and regions, but he has yet to hold one in Gwangju and the surroundin­g Jeolla Provinces. The city of Gwangju and the Jeolla Provinces are stronghold­s of liberal blocs.

“There was no case of two regions

This is unfair compared to other town hall meetings and

not the way that Gwangju citizens want

things to be done.

jointly holding a town hall meeting,” Kang said. “This is unfair compared to other town hall meetings and not the way that Gwangju citizens want things to be done.”

Kang, a member of the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea (DPK), previously requested Yoon to hold a town hall meeting in Gwangju, despite the DPK’s criticism that the town hall meetings are populist measures used to win over voters before the April 10 general elections.

On Feb. 13, the mayor said the president needs to be informed about pending issues in the city such as setting up an artificial intelligen­ce industrial complex. He said that “passing over Gwangju can be seen as the president influencin­g the general elections.”

The presidenti­al office also used Kang’s requests to refute the DPK’s criticism. An official at the presidenti­al office said Monday that “the Gwangju mayor’s requests show that the town hall meetings are not an election campaign,” adding that “we are considerin­g a town hall meeting in South Jeolla Province.”

It remains uncertain when and where Yoon will hold the town hall meeting for the region, but Naju in South Jeolla Province is rumored to be the next stop for Yoon.

Against the backdrop, the ruling

People Power Party’s Gwangju chapter issued a statement criticizin­g Kang for “using Gwangju as a political tool.”

“Kang’s boycott contrasts to South Jeolla Province Governor Kim Yungrok, who seeks to use the town hall meeting as an opportunit­y for developmen­ts in the province,” the statement reads. Governor Kim is also a DPK member.

A South Jeolla Province official told Newsis, a Korean news agency, that the provincial government has no comment regarding the Gwangju mayor’s move, but added that the provincial government will participat­e in the event whether it is held jointly or separately.

 ?? Courtesy of Gwangju city government ?? Gwangju Mayor Kang Ki-jung delivers a speech during a ceremony to commemorat­e the 105th anniversar­y of the March 1 Independen­ce Movement at Gwangju City Hall, March 1.
Courtesy of Gwangju city government Gwangju Mayor Kang Ki-jung delivers a speech during a ceremony to commemorat­e the 105th anniversar­y of the March 1 Independen­ce Movement at Gwangju City Hall, March 1.

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