Police raiding the election commission building with protesters outside demanding an election rerun.
Police raiding the election commission building with protesters outside demanding an election rerun.
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Police raid election commission over ballot shortages

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Police raided the National Election Commission on June 11 over ballot shortages that disrupted voting at 26 polling stations during the June 3 local elections, as protests demanding a rerun continue.

Police conducted a 13-hour search of the commission headquarters in Gwacheon and seven Seoul offices, deploying more than 100 investigators. They are probing possible election law violations and dereliction of duty, with former Chairman Rho Tae-ak named as a suspect.

The commission said shortages hit 14 stations in Songpa District. Acting Chairman Wi Cheol-hwan apologized for lowering the printing ratio to 50 percent and noted a separate vote-counting error in Jeonbuk that did not alter results.

The National Assembly began steps toward a parliamentary investigation, with both major parties submitting requests. Prime Minister Kim Min-seok urged a swift probe. President Lee Jae Myung's approval rating fell nine points to 57 percent.

Hvad folk siger

Initial reactions on X focus on skepticism toward the police investigation into ballot shortages, with users accusing cover-ups, evidence tampering at election offices, and calling for former President Yoon Suk-yeol's return amid broader distrust in institutions like the NEC and police under the current administration. Posts highlight protests, missing materials, and conspiracy theories linking to foreign interference, showing predominantly negative and skeptical sentiments from Korean users.

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A joint police and prosecution team will soon question National Election Commission officials over ballot paper shortages during the June 3 local elections.

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Protests demanding a re-run of local elections marred by ballot shortages continued for the ninth day on June 13.

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Supreme Court Chief Justice Cho Hee-dae accepted the resignation of National Election Commission chairperson Roh Tae-ak on June 8. The move follows ballot shortages that disrupted voting in parts of Seoul during the June 3 local elections.

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Candidate registration opened Thursday for South Korea's June 3 local elections and parliamentary by-elections, seen as a key test of public sentiment toward President Lee Jae Myung's first year in office.

 

 

 

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