South Korea's ruling party suffers devastating defeat in mayoral
elections
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[April 08, 2021]
By Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korean President
Moon Jae-in's ruling party suffered a devastating defeat in a special
election for key mayoral posts amid political scandals and policy
blunders, vote counts showed on Thursday.
Millions of South Koreans went to the polls on Wednesday to elect chiefs
of the country's two largest cities, the capital Seoul and port city of
Busan, among 21 local offices up for grabs.
The election was widely seen a key barometer for potential political
shifts for Moon's progressive party with less than one year before the
March 9 presidential election.
Moon and his Democratic Party have seen their approval ratings plunge to
record lows in recent months amid skyrocketing housing prices, deepening
inequality, sex abuse scandals and souring ties with North Korea.
"The election was a referendum on the Moon administration's economic
policy failures, corruption scandals and the property speculation
cases," said Kim Hyung-joon, a political science professor at Myongji
University in Seoul.
Moon took office in 2017, promising to create jobs and a level playing
field for all Koreans where hardworking people can afford a home and
raise a family.
But the median home prices have surged more than 50% in Seoul since
2017, the fastest pace in the world and under any elected Korean leader,
despite some 25 rounds of cooling measures, according to statistics site
Numbeo.
Anger at runaway home prices and an ongoing investigation into
accusations of insider land trading, involving employees at a state
housing developer, politicians and other officials, has wiped out
earlier rises in Moon's popularity from the government's handling of the
coronavirus pandemic.
"The ruling party's defeat could make him a dead-duck president,
stripping him of any remaining policy momentum, much of which he had
already lost," Kim said.
Moon said on Thursday he "took people's punishment seriously," vowing
efforts to improve the economy and resolve the real estate corruption
scandal, according to his spokesman.
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South Korea's President Moon Jae-in delivers a speech during
the opening ceremony of the 21st National Assembly, in
Seoul, South Korea July 16, 2020. Jung Yeon-je/Pool via
REUTERS
'REFERENDUM'
In Seoul, conservative People Power contender Oh Se-hoon secured
57.5% of votes, clinching victory over Democratic candidate Park
Young-sun who garnered 39.2%, according to the state election
commission.
Exit polls had predicted Oh's landslide victory. Vote counts showed
that Oh won all 25 districts of the city, fetching three times as
many as Park got in the affluent town of Gangnam.
With his win, Oh returns to a post that he held from 2006-11,
allowing the conservatives to retake control of the government of
the capital, home to nearly 20% of the country's 52 million
population, for the first time in a decade.
Oh pledged utmost efforts to rebuild Seoul and lay the groundwork
for a government change through next year's presidential election.
"I will prove that we're competent, different and good at work," he
told a party video conference after taking office on Thursday.
People Power's floor leader Joo Ho-young warned party members of
complacency, saying its victory was a "judgment" over the
administration's policy failures.
Park conceded defeat, vowing "soul-searching over punishment from
citizens." The Democratic Party's leadership resigned, taking
responsibility for its losses.
In Busan, People Party candidate Park Hyung-joon received 62.7% of
the votes, beating Democrat Kim Young-choon who earned 34.4%.
Voter turnout was 58.2% in Seoul and 52.7% in Busan from some 8.4
million and 2.9 million eligible to cast ballots, respectively,
exceeding 50% in a snap election for local offices for the first
time, according to the commission.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Editing by Christopher Cushing and
Michael Perry)
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