- The Washington Times - Thursday, December 5, 2024

SEOUL, South Korea | Korea’s political crisis, ignited by President Yoon Suk Yeol’s shock announcement of martial law on Tuesday, followed by its near-immediate overturn hours later on Wednesday, ramped up a notch Thursday and Friday.

A new development is raising the possibility of a frozen legislative branch compounding ongoing gridlock in the executive branch.

The head of the ruling People Power Party, which has urged the besieged president to resign, said Friday that he supports stripping Mr. Yoon of his powers as president.

He poses a “significant risk of extreme actions, like reattempting to impose martial law, which could potentially put the Republic of Korea and its citizens in great danger,” Han Dong-hun said.

“It’s my judgment that an immediate suspension of President Yoon Suk Yeol’s official duties is necessary to protect the Republic of Korea and its people,” he said during a party meeting.

The move increases Mr. Yoon’s isolation as the party had announced Thursday that it will not support an impending impeachment vote.


SEE ALSO: Motion for South Korean President Yoon’s impeachment filed; vote expected in days


“As party leader, I will work to ensure that this impeachment does not pass,” Mr. Han said then.

It is widely thought that if an impeachment motion is passed and upheld by the Constitutional Court, the leftist Democratic Party of Korea would carry the subsequent presidential election.

A motion for Mr. Yoon’s impeachment was filed Wednesday by 191 lawmakers from the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea and minority parties. A vote is expected Saturday.

Constitutionally, a presidential impeachment motion requires two-thirds of the Assembly’s 300 votes to pass — i.e., 200. However, the PPP occupies 108 seats. That means unless eight or more PPP lawmakers defy Mr. Han’s line and cross the floor, the motion will fail.

Mr. Yoon’s job security is not his only worry: South Korea’s prosecutor general on Thursday ordered an investigation into the president and other key officials for alleged insurrection over the martial law declaration. South Korean police are conducting a separate investigation.

Ruling party conflicted

Facing a long-hostile National Assembly, haunted by low popularity ratings and irked by impeachments of his appointees and repeated demands for probes into his wife’s alleged corruption, Mr. Yoon went for broke with his declaration of martial law.

It proved a colossal blunder: His already wobbly credibility was demolished.

Mr. Yoon has since hunkered down and not appeared in public. His only significant move has been to replace Defense Minister Kim Yong-hyun, widely seen as a key adviser behind his martial law declaration, with Choi Byung Hyuk, a retired general.

Both the president and the now-former defense minister are set to face treason investigations.

Mr. Yoon’s Cabinet — most of whom, according to right-wing media, were dismayed by, or uninformed about his autocoup — have tendered mass resignations.

PPP members rallied and joined majority opposition lawmakers at the National Assembly after Mr. Yoon’s televised declaration late Tuesday.

Furious crowds massed outside, police acted half-heartedly to prevent access and special forces troops seemed uncertain of how to proceed.

Politicians acted with speed and conviction. Just under three hours after Mr. Yoon’s declaration, the 190 lawmakers in the chamber — including 18 from the PPP — voted unanimously to overturn martial law. Mr. Yoon bowed to that decision three hours later.

There was considerable relief. Not a single shot was fired, and no injuries — let alone deaths — were reported.

There was subsequent praise for the solidity of South Korea’s democratic foundations, embedded in 1987 after years of struggle against authoritarian governance. Now, risks are rising again. 

What if impeachment fails?

If both arms of national governance freeze, politics may be pushed onto the streets. 

That could mean the kind of million-person protests that ousted the last conservative president, Park Geun-hye in 2017, will be repeated.

That situation, however, is not directly comparable. Then, the conservative party accepted the inevitable and voted to impeach — unlike the PPP today.

Politics watchers are scratching their heads.

“There is no answer right now,” said Yang Sun-mook, a former international relations head of the DPK. “So far this has been absurd; ahead, there could be unheard-of chaos.”

The PPP is in a ticklish position. Courtesy of just eight seats in the 300-person legislature, it could maintain a despised and disempowered president and bring National Assembly business to a standstill.

Lee Jae-myung — who, as DPK head, is likely the chief beneficiary of Mr. Yoon’s downfall — urged the PPP against becoming “accomplices to treason.”

Some reckon Mr. Lee and his supporters moved too swiftly.

“Perhaps they should have waited a few weeks for a million people to hit the streets,” said Mike Breen, a long-term Korean watcher and author of “The Koreans.” 

“That could have changed some PPP lawmakers’ minds,” he said.

Though he agrees Mr. Yoon badly erred, Mr. Breen suggested that a national habit of punishing presidents and ex-presidents is a cycle some Koreans oppose.

Since national establishment in 1948, one has been exiled, one assassinated and one took his own life. Three have been jailed and two have been impeached — one successfully.

Mr. Breen also noted that the huge demonstrations that led to the last impeachment — Ms. Park’s — were orchestrated in their early stages by unionists who also oppose Mr. Yoon.

“They have been mobilizing for Yoon’s impeachment since he was elected,” Mr. Breen said.

Outside the corridors of power, the nation is calm, with demonstrations good-natured.

On Wednesday night, thousands of protesters intending to march on the presidential compound were amicably halted by police, about one mile from Mr. Yoon’s location.

“There is an air among the general public that they went through a lot worse situations than this,” said Mr. Yang.

Though he admitted to misgivings about politics, he also said that Korea’s elite bureaucrats can keep administrative wheels turning — at least for the short term.

“Cabinet members have resigned, nobody is working and that could be OK for a few days,” he said. “But we have an expression, that reserve manpower among the civil service is ready to take on more work.”

• Andrew Salmon can be reached at asalmon@washingtontimes.com.

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