South Korean opposition submits motion to impeach the country's acting
president as strife deepens
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[December 26, 2024]
By KIM TONG-HYUNG
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea’s main opposition party submitted
a motion on Thursday to impeach the country’s acting leader over his
reluctance to fill three Constitutional Court vacancies ahead of the
court’s review of rebellion charges against impeached President Yoon Suk
Yeol stemming from his short-lived martial law decree on Dec. 3.
The court appointments have stalled amid an intensifying dispute between
the liberal opposition and Yoon’s conservative party, and the potential
impeachment of Prime Minister Han Duck-soo may deepen the political
paralysis that has halted high-level diplomacy and rattled financial
markets.
The opposition-controlled National Assembly also passed motions calling
for the appointment of three Constitutional Court justices as the court
prepares to start deliberations on whether to dismiss or reinstate Yoon.
The vote came shortly after Han reiterated in a televised statement that
he wouldn’t appoint the justices without bipartisan consent.
National Assembly Speaker Woo Won Shik urged Han to swiftly appoint the
justices, saying that his calls for bipartisan consent essentially
amounted to a refusal and “infringes on the National Assembly’s right to
select Constitutional Court justices.”
Yoon’s People Power Party, whose members mostly boycotted the National
Assembly vote, argued that Han shouldn’t exercise presidential authority
to appoint the proposed justices while Yoon has yet to be formally
removed from office.
The main opposition Democratic Party has accused the conservatives of
undermining the court process to save Yoon’s presidency, and its motion
to impeach Han could go to a floor vote as early as Friday. The
Democrats’ floor leader, Park Chan-dae, said Han’s comments showed “he
lacks both the qualifications to serve as the acting leader and the will
to uphold the Constitution.”
Yoon’s presidential powers were suspended after the National Assembly
voted to impeach him on Dec. 14 over an attempted power grab that lasted
only hours but has triggered weeks of political turmoil that has shaken
one of Asia’s most robust democracies.
To formally end Yoon’s presidency, at least six justices on the
nine-member Constitutional Court must vote in favor. Three seats remain
vacant following retirements and a full bench could make conviction more
likely.
The court, which is to hold a pretrial hearing in Yoon’s case on Friday,
has said it believes the acting president can exercise the right to
appoint justices.
Three of the court’s nine justices are directly appointed by the
president. Three are nominated by the head of the Supreme Court and
three by the National Assembly, and they are then formally appointed by
the president in what is widely considered a procedural matter.
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South Korea's acting President Han Duck-soo speaks at the government
complex in Seoul, South Korea, Thursday, Dec. 26, 2024. (Choi Jae-koo/Yonhap
via AP)
The three seats that are currently open are to be nominated by
lawmakers. South Korea’s Constitution states that the National
Assembly “selects” three spots on the court rather than recommends,
suggesting that the presidential appointments for these spots are a
formality rather than a substantive authority, according to some
legal experts.
“The consistent spirit reflected in our Constitution and laws is
that an acting president should focus on maintaining stability in
governance to help the country overcome crisis while refraining from
exercising significant powers exclusive to the president, including
appointments to constitutional institutions,” Han said. “I will
withhold the appointment of Constitutional Court justices until the
ruling and opposition parties submit an agreed-upon proposal.”
Han has also clashed with the Democrats over his vetoes of
controversial agricultural bills endorsed by the opposition and
refusal to approve bills calling for independent investigations of
Yoon and corruption allegations involving his wife, Kim Keon Hee.
If Han is impeached, Choi Sang-mok, the country’s deputy prime
minister and finance minister, is next in line.
The impeachment vote against Han could face legal ambiguities. Most
South Korean officials can be impeached with a simple majority of
the National Assembly, but impeaching presidents requires
two-thirds. The rival parties differ on which standard should apply
to an acting president. The Democratic Party controls 170 of the
National Assembly’s 300 seats, so it would need support from members
of other parties including Yoon’s own to get a two-thirds majority.
While focusing on defending himself in the Constitutional Court,
Yoon has dodged several requests by law enforcement authorities to
appear for questioning over rebellion charges and also blocked
searches of his office. The Corruption Investigation Office for
High-Ranking Officials, which is leading a joint investigation with
police and military authorities of Yoon, summoned him for
questioning this Sunday after he ignored a request to appear on
Christmas Day. The office plans to question Yoon on charges of abuse
of authority and orchestrating a rebellion.
Authorities have already arrested Yoon’s defense minister, police
chief and several other military commanders involved in the attempt
to implement martial law, which harkened back to the days of
authoritarian leaders the country hasn’t seen since the 1980s.
In a news conference in Seoul, Yoo Seung Soo, lawyer for former
Defense Minister Kim Yong Hyun, repeated Yoon’s claim that his
martial law decree was to “sound alarm against ... political abuse”
by an opposition that has bogged down his agenda, and did not amount
to a rebellion.
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