One Week Into Campaign, Party Votes on Replacing Nominee

People Power Party members reject attempt in phone survey
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted May 10, 2025 11:31 AM CDT
Updated May 10, 2025 12:00 PM CDT
One Week Into Campaign, Party Votes on Replacing Nominee
South Korea's People Power Party's presidential election candidate Kim Moon Soo, right, talks with independent preliminary presidential election candidate Han Duck-soo during a meeting in Seoul on Thursday.   (Yonhap via AP)

South Korea's embattled conservative party canceled then reinstated the presidential candidacy of Kim Moon Soo within hours on Saturday as internal turmoil escalated ahead of the June 3 election. The chaotic U-turn, after a failed attempt to replace Kim with former Prime Minister Han Duck-soo, underscored the People Power Party's leadership crisis following the ouster of former President Yoon Suk Yeol over his martial law imposition in December, the AP reports, which possibly doomed the conservatives' chances of winning another term in government.

Kim, a former labor minister under Yoon, was named the PPP's presidential candidate on May 3 after winning 56.3% of the primary vote, defeating a reformist rival who had criticized Yoon's martial law. But the PPP's leadership, dominated by Yoon loyalists, had spent the past week desperately pressuring Kim to step aside and back Han, who they believed stood a stronger chance against liberal Democratic Party frontrunner Lee Jae-myung. After talks between Han and Kim failed to unify their candidacies, the PPP's emergency committee took the unprecedented step early Saturday of nullifying its primary, canceling Kim's nomination and registering Han as both a party member and its new presidential candidate.

The scheme required approval through an all-party vote conducted through an automated phone survey, which ultimately rejected the switch on Saturday night, per the AP. "While we cannot disclose the figures, the vote on switching the candidate was rejected by a narrow margin," party spokesman and lawmaker Shin Dong-wook said. Kim, who had denounced the party's attempt to replace him as an "overnight political coup," was immediately reinstated as the candidate and plans to officially register with election authorities on Sunday, according to the party. "Now everything will return to its rightful place," Kim said in a statement.

(More South Korea stories.)

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