Liberals in free-for-all fight as DPK fails to patch up internal feuds

Main opposition Democratic Party of Korea Chairman Lee Jae-myung, center, walks out of Hyochang Park in Yongsan District, Seoul, Friday, after paying tribute to the tombs of former officials of the Korean Provisional Government. Yonhap

The liberals in Korean politics are splitting into various splinter groups as they fail to patch up conflicts surrounding main opposition Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) Chairman Lee Jae-myung’s powerful grip on recommending candidates for the April 10 general elections .Dozens of DPK members are also leaving the party to join those splinter groups despite their uncertain future, expressing their grievances with Lee’s “coercive leadership.” With scenarios becoming ever more complicated for the liberal bloc, some analysts even anticipate that it may be difficult for the DPK to secure more than 100 out of 300 National Assembly seats. During an interview with broadcaster MBC on Friday, DPK floor leader Rep. Hong Ihk-pyo denounced the party’s decision to exclude Rep. Hong Young-pyo from the candidate nomination in his constituency, Incheon’s Bupyeong-B.“I absolutely don’t understand what kind of political decision it was,” the floor leader said. “Rep. Hong told me that he will not leave the DPK as long as he can compete in a primary, and I delivered his intention to the candidate recommendation committee, but he ended up being sidelined from the primary .”Hong Young-pyo is a four-term lawmaker categorized into a faction of loyalists to former President Moon Jae-in. He has been critical of the DPK’s candidate nomination process, claiming that it is aimed at sidelining those who are not loyal to the party chairman. He has been assisting a protest staged by former presidential chief of staff Im Jong-seok, who was also sidelined from candidacy. After the exclusion, Rep. Hong dropped hints at that he would leave the party, saying “I will purse my purpose with those who have thoughts on new politics.”Hong’s remarks are interpreted as showing his intention to form a group of pro-Moon DPK defectors, tentatively called “the Democratic Coalition.” It will be a gathering of serving lawmakers who left the DPK in protest of the party’s candidate nominations, and its members will run as independent candidates in the elections.

Members rumored to be interested in the Democratic Coalition include Rep. Sul Hoon, who left the party protesting his placement in the bottom 10 percent of lawmakers in an evaluation of legislative performance. Sul, a five-term lawmaker, told Dong-A Ilbo newspaper that he and Hong will form the Democratic Coalition with the goal of teaming up with approximately 10 serving lawmakers. Along with Sul and Hong, a series of liberal politicians who been in the DPK for more than a decade decided to leave their nest after losing their candidacies .Rep. Kim Young-joo, the National Assembly deputy speaker who announced her departure in early February, is a four-term lawmaker. Rep. Lee Won-wook, who left the DPK and joined the Reform Party, is a three-term lawmaker, and Saemirae Party head Lee Nak-yon has served five terms as a DPK lawmaker, as well as having been party chairman previously. The emergence of the Democratic Coalition is making the liberal bloc’s election scenarios even more complicated. As of Friday, there are four splinter political parties or groups which have embraced politicians leaving the DPK after clashing over Chairman Lee’s dominance. The Saemirae Party, led by Lee Nak-yon, now has two serving lawmakers. The Reform Party, which was set up as a big tent group of outcasts from both liberal and conservative parties, has four incumbent lawmakers. The National Innovation Party, led by Cho Kuk, former justice minister during the Moon administration, has yet to complete its legal process for establishment. When the Democratic Coalition officially kicks off, though it may not be a political party, the DPK will likely see more of its lawmakers 카지노사이트 defecting.

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