Protests over ballot shortages continue for ninth day

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

Around 700 protesters gathered near SK Olympic Handball Gymnasium in Seoul's Jamsil district at 9 a.m., chanting slogans and waving flags. Numbers were sharply down from 8,000 the previous night.

The demonstrations began after ballot shortages halted voting at 26 polling stations during the June 3 mayoral and gubernatorial elections. The National Election Commission apologized for underestimating turnout but maintained that a re-run is not warranted.

President Lee Jae Myung pledged a full investigation and reforms for the election body. Opposition People Power Party leader Jang Dong-hyeok called for talks with Prime Minister Kim Min-seok and ruling Democratic Party leader Jung Chung-rae.

Relaterede artikler

Protesters gathered outside a Seoul vote-counting facility amid ballot shortage controversy.
Billede genereret af AI

Seoul ballot shortage protests enter fifth day

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

Protests outside a Seoul vote-counting facility entered their fifth day Tuesday over ballot shortages that disrupted last week's local elections, as a court ordered evidence preservation and the new assembly speaker pledged a swift parliamentary response.

Protests over ballot shortages during local elections entered their second day in Seoul on Saturday, with thousands surrounding a vote-counting facility and demanding a new election.

Rapporteret af AI

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.

South Korea's ruling Democratic Party secured a landslide in Wednesday's local elections, winning 12 of 16 key races and strengthening President Lee Jae Myung's mandate.

Rapporteret af AI

The head of South Korea's election watchdog offered to resign on June 5 after ballot shortages disrupted voting in parts of Seoul during this week's local elections.

South Korea's National Election Commission said Saturday that 513 candidates were elected without a vote ahead of the June 3 local elections.

Rapporteret af AI

A ruling party-led constitutional amendment bill failed to pass a parliamentary vote on May 7 after the main opposition party boycotted the session, falling short of the required quorum.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis