Campaigning begins for South Korea's June 3 local elections

Official campaigning for South Korea's June 3 local elections and parliamentary by-elections started on Thursday, May 21, with nearly 7,830 candidates competing nationwide. The two-week period runs until June 2 and is seen as an early test for the Lee Jae Myung administration.

The National Election Commission reported that 7,829 candidates had registered, with 7,820 still in the race. Voters will choose 16 metropolitan and provincial chiefs, 227 mayors and county heads, and 14 National Assembly members.

The ruling Democratic Party of Korea views the vote as a chance to strengthen support for President Lee Jae Myung. Senior party member Rep. Jo Seoung-lae called the elections a “golden time to complete Korea’s normalization” and stressed the need to remove “incompetent remnants of insurrection” tied to the 2024 martial law declaration.

Recent polls show tightening races. In Seoul, Democratic candidate Chong Won-o leads incumbent Oh Se-hoon of the People Power Party 40 percent to 37 percent. In Busan, Democratic candidate Chun Jae-soo holds a 44 percent to 35 percent edge.

The government raised the national terrorism alert level from “attention” to “caution” through June 4 to protect voters and campaign staff. Early voting is scheduled for May 30 and 31.

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Illustration of candidate registration for South Korea's June 3 local elections in a government office with people, flags, and media present.
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Candidate registration opens for 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.

Many South Koreans headed to the polls on Friday for two days of early voting ahead of the June 3 local elections and parliamentary by-elections, viewed as a referendum on President Lee Jae Myung's first year in office.

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Early voting for South Korea's June 3 local elections and by-elections opened Friday across 3,571 stations nationwide. The vote is widely seen as a referendum on President Lee Jae Myung's first year.

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.

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President Lee Jae Myung said Sunday he accepts complaints about voting rights infringement due to ballot shortages in the June 3 local elections but rejected claims of election fraud as a distortion of the issue.

Lee Jin-sook, former Korea Communications Commission chief, announced Saturday she is stepping down as a preliminary candidate for Daegu mayor. Excluded from the People Power Party's primary, she opted to support the party's nominee rather than run independently amid fears of a Democratic Party win. The primary concludes Sunday ahead of the June 3 local elections.

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A joint police and prosecution team was set on Thursday to question four more election officials over ballot shortages that disrupted the June 3 local elections.

 

 

 

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