[Naver]From Prosecutor General to elected president in 370 days..."the people have chosen"

  • [naver/teens stories] FROM PROSECUTOR GENERAL TO ELECTED PRESIDENT IN 370 DAYS... "THE PEOPLE HAVE CHOSEN"


    AVvXsEh-B2RvvOwi0ussospe1mId0DP6-ur_RJ4Ci-kSXW8bmmfV-Ih0GeUdmY2Cp2zhrs09TGsRx_piEbJLq7rUAfe152oKsbLYisl0YMul-qvDMqK62cnK0TcTLPb2jyHBTPIBJ2WNN8ZZnSuxfuW6CwD78-f4rGcEXgWzY6Vbi2JJ3FP8NsfGBSRFLBt2=s16000


    SEOUL — A graft prosecutor-turned opposition leader has won an extremely close presidential election in South Korea, reinstating conservatives to power with calls for a more confrontational stance against North Korea and a stronger alliance with the United States.


    With 98 percent of the votes counted, the opposition leader, Yoon Suk-yeol, was leading by a margin of 263,000 votes, or 0.8 percentage points, when his opponent conceded early Thursday. It was South Korea’s tightest race since it began holding free presidential elections in 1987.


    Mr. Yoon will replace President Moon Jae-in, a progressive leader whose single five-year term ends in May.


    The election was widely seen as a referendum on Mr. Moon’s government. Its failure to curb skyrocketing housing prices angered voters. So did #MeToo and corruption scandals involving Mr. Moon’s political allies, as well as a lack of progress in rolling back North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.


    “This was not an election for the future but an election looking back to judge the Moon administration,” said Prof. Ahn Byong-jin, a political scientist at Kyung Hee University in Seoul. “By electing Yoon, people wanted to punish Moon’s government they deemed incompetent and hypocritical and to demand a fairer society.”


    But, as the close results showed, the electorate was closely divided, with many voters lamenting a choice between “unlikables.”


    Mr. Yoon’s opponent, Lee Jae-myung of the governing Democratic Party, acknowledged his country’s rifts in his concession speech. “I sincerely ask the president-elect to lead the country over the divide and conflict and open an era of unity and harmony,” he said.


    The victory for Mr. Yoon, who is 61, returns conservatives back to power after five years in the political wilderness. His People Power Party had been in disarray following the impeachment of its leader, President Park Geun-hye, whom Mr. Yoon helped convict and imprison on corruption charges. Mr. Yoon, who also went after another former president and the head of Samsung, was recruited by the party to engineer a conservative revival.


    The election was watched closely by both South Korea’s neighbors and the United States government. Mr. Yoon’s election might upend the current president’s progressive agenda, especially his policy of seeking dialogue and peace with North Korea. As president, Mr. Moon has met with North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, three times, though that did nothing to stop Mr. Kim from rapidly expanding his nuclear weapons program.


    Mr. Yoon has vehemently criticized Mr. Moon’s approach on North Korea, as well as toward China.


    He insists that U.N. sanctions should be enforced until North Korea is completely denuclearized, a stance that aligns more closely with Washington’s than with Mr. Moon’s, and is anathema to North Korea. Mr. Yoon has also called for ratcheting up joint military drills between South Korea and the United States — which were scaled down under Mr. Moon — another stance likely to rile North Korea, which may now raise tensions through more weapons tests.


    “Peace is meaningless unless it is backed by power,” Mr. Yoon said during the campaign. “War can be avoided only when we acquire an ability to launch pre-emptive strikes and show our willingness to use them.”


    Mr. Moon has kept a balance between the United States, South Korea’s most important ally, and China, its biggest trading partner — an approach known as “strategic ambiguity.” Mr. Yoon said he would show “strategic clarity,” and favor Washington. He called the rivalry between the two great powers “a contest between liberalism and authoritarianism.”


    North Korea will likely pose Mr. Yoon’s first foreign policy crisis.


    It has conducted a flurry of missile tests this year and might consider Mr. Yoon’s confrontational rhetoric the prod it needs to escalate tensions further.


    “We will see North Korea return to a power-for-power standoff, at least in the early part of Yoon’s term,” said Lee Byong-chul, a North Korea expert at Kyungnam University’s Institute for Far Eastern Studies in Seoul.


    Mr. Yoon served as prosecutor general under Mr. Moon. His political stock rose among conservative South Koreans when he resigned last year and became a bitter critic of his former boss. Pre-election surveys had indicated that South Koreans would vote for Mr. Yoon less because they liked him than to show their anger at Mr. Moon and his Democratic Party.


    “This was such a hot and heated race,’’ Mr. Yoon told a gathering of supporters at the National Assembly Library. “But the competition is over and now it’s time for us to join our forces together for the people and the nation.”


    His election comes as South Korea is projecting influence around the world as never before. The small nation of 52 million people has long punched above its weight in manufacturing and technology, but more recently has added film, television and music to its list of successful global exports.


    At home, however, voters are deeply unhappy.


    Home prices are out of reach. The country has one of the world’s lowest birthrates, with the population falling for the first time on record in 2021 as economic uncertainty makes young people reluctant to marry or have children. Legions of people fresh out of college complain about a lack of job opportunities, often accusing older generations of hanging onto their jobs. And both anti-immigrant and anti-feminist sentiment are on the rise.


    The deepening uncertainty, made worse by two years of Covid restrictions, has left many, especially young people, anxious about the future.


    “We are the betrayed generation,” said Kim Go-eun, 31, who works for a convenience store chain. “We have been taught that if we studied and worked hard, we would have a decent job and economically stable life. None of that has come true.


    No matter how hard we try, we don’t see a chance to join the middle class,” she said.


    The campaign also exposed a nation deeply divided over gender conflicts. Mr. Yoon was accused of pandering to widespread sentiment against China and against feminists among young men, whose support proved crucial to his victory. Exit polls showed the voters in their 20s split sharply along the gender line, with men favoring Mr. Yoon and women Mr. Lee.


    Young men said they were gravitating toward Mr. Yoon because he spoke to some of their deepest concerns, like the fear that an influx of immigrants and a growing feminist movement would further erode their job opportunities. Professor Ahn likened the phenomenon to “Trumpism.”


    “We may not be completely satisfied with Yoon, but he is the only hope we've got,” said Kim Seong-heon, 26, a university student in Seoul who lives in a windowless room barely big enough to squeeze in a bed and closet.


    Mr. Yoon promised deregulation to spur investment. He also promised 2.5 million new homes to make housing more affordable.


    But the newly elected president may face fierce resistance at the National Assembly, where Mr. Moon’s Democratic Party holds a majority. Mr. Yoon’s campaign promise to abolish the country’s ministry of gender equality may prove particularly contentious.


    He also has to contend with a bitter, disillusioned public.


    New allegations of legal and ethical misconduct emerged almost daily to cast doubt on Mr. Yoon and his wife, Kim Keon-hee, as well as on his rival, Mr. Lee.


    Many voters felt they were left with an unappealing choice.


    “It was not about whom you liked better but about whom you hated less,” said Jeong Sang-min, 35, a logistics official at an international apparel company.
    AVvXsEhGjffdBweeYk4Zhd3OoWeW1KhEyL0qV4ejyJ6MD2a3K9qniRkRCoxPxjRG4EsF9-vJt0dCV9VMiGmUrik4b4wYzQPsVSmLV9W3xy4nmJ3guT-OmeKOn_UwyQIUuUsnyrMviAljFE5-avRQj6nNN8Taix149N8jO-mNCIQWxTMWSPkxa808jf98UaWJ=s16000
    AVvXsEgV68bXBrZfnjGjMTZl0o4SNlTfYNZ253XcFrULJvgU3g550ZMjCOUsx9neS48_oLSVFugOMyosXDYepLQOtVaxTF3C_yxWEmU3evL6pTPzo-Q51VAqYD-u3Pov2COF32X_iNiOCX8FMDhMHeV6w10PcqaQttz01V5MjgWgdu4YCbGOizItIwQabFuK=s16000


    original post: here

    1. [+609, -30]
    Please build a normal country


    2. [+541, -29]
    This was not a victory for the Conservatives. It stems from the disappointment with the Moon administration. Don't rejoice or show your keenness too much. People's hearts are very bitter right now. Please, I hope you can lead the country well.


    3. [+458, -27]
    Elected candidate Yoon, you didn't get elected because you were good or did anything worthwhile. You can tell just by looking at the results, but you need to realize how difficult the decision was made by the majority of the people. The people who voted for you are so tired of the current Democratic administration that they chose to hold on to even a glimmer of hope. Doesn't this result prove it? It means that you were elected because they hated the state of the current government, which was unable to keep a single seat even after securing 180 seats and filled their stomachs. The Conservative's victory...? You didn't win. The people are the ones who are giving you the opportunity to restore the country back to normal, it's not a victory.


    3. [+226, -29]
    Congratulations. I hope you keep your promises and become a respected president.


    4. [+132, -20]
    The corruption of the pre-election should be thoroughly investigated. Reorganize the judiciary system to restore the broken laws!


    5. [+138, -100]
    Now that you have become president, you must investigate the stock price manipulation done by your wife and mother-in-law. Get a special inspection in Daejang-dong, and justly reveal the Sewol Ferry truth and lower housing prices. I heard you're for justice. I hope you do it properly. Anyways, today, I hate my country. And you're representing it.

  • “It was not about whom you liked better but about whom you hated less,” said Jeong Sang-min, 35, a logistics official at an international apparel company.

    So it was the US in 2016? I can definitely tell them that they fucked up. :pepe-toast:

  • “By electing Yoon, people wanted to punish Moon’s government they deemed incompetent and hypocritical and to demand a fairer society.”

    the fact that this is what led to right wing governments winning in some countries and it did not end well at all... I really hope things just go alright righ there

  • the fact that this is what led to right wing governments winning in some countries and it did not end well at all... I really hope things just go alright righ there

    besides the mean tweets, the US didn't do bad under Trump...certainly better than they're doing under Biden so far.

  • besides the mean tweets, the US didn't do bad under Trump...certainly better than they're doing under Biden so far.

    We literally had insurrection.

  • 1: no matter how illogical it is, do not set a precedent for punishing the previous administration unless egregious crimes were committed. If you make every election look like a coup, when will the distinction be thin enough that the next leader is actually decided by a coup?


    2: Confrontational politics in international policy is only going to make you enemies, no matter how much they align with your allies. Do not rally under a flag, group, or alliance, Rally under a proven ideal. Play the long con and the more you use the power of time to your advantage, the better. For democratically elected administrations, this means forging a plan so good that even if the opposition party took power, they'll have no good reason to even think about removing it.


    3: If there is a felt need to use law to change things in your favor, well, do better then use that power to see what went wrong. If you must oppress another group to feel secure, then are you really secure at all?


    Speaking from Model United Nations experience; does not necessarily reflect reality.


    "the poorest politician that still gets results is hardened rather softened in face of bribery; he has understood that the honey is meant to catch flies" - My MUN teacher. It is lamentable that there is always money crimes involved somewhere, acknowledged, unacknowledged, or under wraps.


    "Equality is a fickle thing; No one is equal. I am not you nor are you your mom and so on. But we must feel that no one is wronging, undercutting, backstabbing, or framing you. If we must insist that we are fundamentally equal then try living a life where there is only one coat size, pants size, shoe size, whatever size. We'd be equally miserable except for that one guy that got lucky! Hardly the goal we meant. However! One Newton is one Newton! One Watt is one Watt! One's person's work is equal to another person's work. Equal effort is the stronghold of the universe, why can't it be the same for our society?" - My physics teacher (bless her)


    This quote applies particularly to number three. The fear of immigrants, other genders, etc. stealing your opportunity flies in the face of the universe's equality of work. To have to devalue one's work and worth of work for your job opportunity is like saying one joule of energy from me actually is two joules of energy from the next guy but the reality is is that my one joule is only worth one joule and the next guy gets the job because he could produce two joules of energy over my one joule.

  • besides the mean tweets, the US didn't do bad under Trump...certainly better than they're doing under Biden so far.

    Yeah. Pragmatically, Biden is not any better than Trump, even more warmongering.

    Remember the whole handling of the coronavirus... yeah

    Did you mean the mass vaccination stocked by Trump?

  • besides the mean tweets, the US didn't do bad under Trump...certainly better than they're doing under Biden so far.

    our farming belt was literally hurting from the trade war and then ivanka trump gets several trademarks in china.


    he talked about punishing china and promoting domestic industry -- well he punished our domestic industry and rewarded china and his clan in the process.

  • Did you mean the mass vaccination stocked by Trump?

    Did you mean the disbandment of the pandemic taskforce and the neglected PPE stockpiles, spreading of vaccine misinformation, etc.?


    That, despite several warnings, did not warn the public to prepare?


    "everything will be fine" "there are only a few people"


    The UV exposure, the Injecting of bleach, the ingesting of hydroxychloroquine, the blind faith in the summer heat, It seems like people have forgotten what this man pushed with his power as the elected president.

  • I don't think Biden has successfully convinced any anti-vac to be vaccinated anyway. Has he?

    Has the situation actually any better because of Biden? The death toll still is high and the situation seems to be pretty much assuaged by omicron overtaking delta more than anything.

Participate now!

Don’t have an account yet? Register yourself now and be a part of our community!