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.

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Protesters gathered outside a Seoul vote-counting facility amid ballot shortage controversy.
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Seoul ballot shortage protests enter fifth day

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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.

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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.

South Korea's ruling Democratic Party secured 12 of 16 major local posts in June 3 elections. The main opposition retained Seoul with Oh Se-hoon winning a fifth term. Ballot shortages disrupted voting in parts of the capital.

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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.

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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The Justice Ministry has imposed a travel ban on Roh Tae-ak, the former head of the National Election Commission, as part of an investigation into ballot shortages during the June 3 local elections.

 

 

 

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