Leaders in a meeting at the presidential office discussing reforms to the election commission due to ballot shortages.
Leaders in a meeting at the presidential office discussing reforms to the election commission due to ballot shortages.
Image générée par IA

Leaders urge Election Commission reform after ballot shortage

Image générée par IA

A four-way meeting on June 8 at the presidential office called for accountability and structural changes at the National Election Commission after ballot shortages disrupted the June 3 local elections.

President Lee Jae Myung, National Assembly Speaker Cho Jeong-sik, Chief Justice Jo Hee-de, Constitutional Court President Kim Sang-hwan and Prime Minister Kim Min-seok attended the meeting. The president admitted a lack of sensitivity on sovereignty issues and said the incident was separate from election fraud claims. The Democratic Party submitted a request for a parliamentary investigation. People Power Party leader Jang Dong-hyeok called for a nationwide rerun election. Exit poll results released by broadcasters while voting continued in Songpa also drew criticism. The editorials stressed that the commission's independence should not shield it from accountability. They called for external oversight or major restructuring, including separating judges from local election commission roles.

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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.

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.

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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.

A second attempt by the ruling Democratic Party to pass a constitutional amendment bill collapsed on Friday after the opposition People Power Party again blocked proceedings in the National Assembly.

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Early voting for the June 3 local elections took place on Friday and Saturday, recording a turnout of 23.51 percent, the highest for local elections since 2014. President Lee Jae Myung faced criticism over his actions at a polling station and social media posts urging participation.

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

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