The SNAP election was triggered by the removal of Yoon Sook-Yeol from the presidency with the declaration of martial law on December 3rd.
South Korea’s major Conservatives have appointed former Labor Minister and veteran politician Kim Moon-Soo as presidential candidate for the SNAP election on June 3.
Kim, 73, won the People’s Power Party (PPP) nomination in Saturday with 56.5% of the vote at the party’s national convention in Goyan, Kyoto province.
The election was triggered by a dramatic blast of conservative President Yoon Sook-yeol after the South Korean Constitutional Court ruled on December 3 that it violated its obligations by declaring martial law without justification.
The verdict ended Yoon’s president and forced the country to vote early in order to choose his successor.
Kim, a former labor activist who later moved to a conservative camp, previously served as the Minister of Labor under the Governor-General of the Kyoto Province of South Korea from 2006 to 2014.
Kim was a clear frontline with almost 50% of public support, with Kim having 13% support, according to a poller survey released Monday.
Kim has committed to implementing a business-friendly policy if elected. In his acceptance speech, he pledged to lay out a drastic, conservative vision for the country, steal strong boundaries with North Korea, and implement incentives for businesses, innovation and science.
He also pledged to strengthen policies to support young workers and the underprivileged, and spoke about his experiences as a labor and democratic activist while at a university where he was imprisoned and exiled from school.
“I have never abandoned the weakest of us at the lowest places,” he said.
But this week, the race was shaken by a court that questioned Lee’s eligibility for running for presidency and overturned a lower court’s acquittal that facilitated violating election laws in the previous race.
The Supreme Court sent the case back to the Court of Appeals, but it was not clear when the new ruling would take place.
On Friday, Yun’s former Prime Minister Han Dak So announced his entry into the presidential election, hoping to capitalize on his outstanding profile. Han is not a member of the Conservative Party, but is mentioned as a potential partner in the party fighting the Liberal Party in race.
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