Conservative candidate Yoon Suk-yeol wins South Korean presidency

Yoon Suk-yeol, the conservative opposition candidate, defeated liberal Lee Jae-myung, his chief rival, on Thursday, winning one of the country’s most closely fought presidential elections. Mr. Yoon will be taking office in May and serving a single five-year term.

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Lee Jin-man/AP
Yoon Suk-yeol, the presidential candidate of the main opposition People Power Party, holds bouquets as he is congratulated by party's members and lawmakers at the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea, March 10, 2022. Mr. Yoon was elected South Korea's new president.

Yoon Suk-yeol, a conservative former top prosecutor and foreign policy neophyte, was elected South Korea’s president in a win expected to herald a drive to seek a stronger alliance with the United States and take a tougher line on North Korea.

With over 99% of the votes counted early Thursday, Mr. Yoon from the main opposition People Power Party had 48.6% against ruling liberal Democratic Party candidate Lee Jae-myung’s 47.8%. It was South Korea’s most closely fought presidential election.

A crowd of supporters gathered near Mr. Yoon’s house and his party’s campaign office, shouting his name in celebration.

“This is the victory of our great people,” Mr. Yoon said in his victory speech at the party office. “I would respect our constitution and parliament and work together with the opposition party to serve our people properly.”

Mr. Yoon is to take office in May and serve a single five-year term as leader of the world’s 10th largest economy.

Earlier, Mr. Lee, a former governor of Gyeonggi province, conceded his defeat at his party headquarters.

“I did my best but wasn’t able to live up to expectations,” a glum Mr. Lee said. “I congratulate candidate Yoon Suk-yeol. I sincerely ask the president-elect to overcome division and conflicts and open a new era of unity and harmony.”

Wednesday’s election boiled down to a two-way showdown between Mr. Yoon and Mr. Lee, who spent months slamming, mocking, and demonizing each other in one of the most bitter political campaigns in recent memory. Their fighting aggravated already severe domestic divisions and stoked speculation the losing candidate might face criminal probes over scandals that they’ve been linked to.

After winning the election, Mr. Yoon said his race with Mr. Lee and other contenders has improved South Korean politics. “Our competition is over for now. We should combine our strengths and become one for our people,” he said.

Critics say neither Mr. Yoon nor Mr. Lee has presented a clear strategy for how they would ease the threat from North Korea and its nuclear weapons. They also say voters are skeptical about how both would handle international relations amid the U.S.-China rivalry and how they would address widening economic inequality and runaway housing prices.

Mr. Yoon says he would sternly deal with North Korean provocations and seek to boost trilateral security cooperation with Washington and Tokyo to neutralize North Korean nuclear threats. He has made it clear that an enhanced alliance with the United States would be the center of his foreign policy. Mr. Yoon said he would take a more assertive stance on China.

Mr. Lee, for his part, had called for greater reconciliation with North Korea and a diplomatic pragmatism amid the U.S.-China confrontations.

Some experts say Mr. Yoon’s foreign policy stance would put Seoul closer to Washington but he cannot avoid frictions with Pyongyang and Beijing.

“We can expect the alliance to run more smoothly and be in sync for the most part on North Korea, China, and regional and global issues,” said Duyeon Kim, a senior analyst at Washington’s Center for a New American Security. “Yoon’s key challenge is whether he will listen to his advisors and whether he’s able to really be tougher toward North Korea and China when he’s faced with political and geo-economic realities after he’s in office.”

Mr. Yoon had been current liberal President Moon Jae-in’s prosecutor general but resigned and joined the opposition last year following infighting over probes of Mr. Moon’s allies. Mr. Yoon said those investigations were objective and principled, but Mr. Moon’s supporters said he was trying to thwart Mr. Moon’s prosecution reforms and elevate his own political standing.

Mr. Yoon’s critics have attacked him over a lack of experience in party politics, foreign policy, and other key state affairs. Mr. Yoon has responded he would let experienced officials handle state affairs that require expertise.

On domestic issues, Mr. Yoon was accused of stoking gender animosities by adopting a Donald Trump-like brand of divisive identity politics that spoke almost exclusively to men. He vowed to abolish the country’s Gender Equality and Family Ministry in an apparent bid to win the votes of young men who decry gender equality policies and the loss of traditional privileges in a hyper-competitive job market.

An immediate priority for Mr. Yoon would be to contain an unprecedented wave in an omicron-driven coronavirus infections, which has erased the country’s hard-won pandemic gains. South Korea’s health authorities reported a record 342,446 new virus cases on Wednesday. Hospitalizations and deaths have also been creeping up.

Healing the country’s deepened divide along the lines of ideology, regional loyalties, and gender would be a crucial task for Mr. Yoon. He may otherwise face huge impasses in his domestic agenda and struggle to push forward his major policies confronting a parliament still controlled by Mr. Lee’s party.

Mr. Yoon has promised to launch a coalition government with Ahn Cheol-soo, another conservative candidate who pulled out of the race last week to throw his support behind him. While Mr. Ahn’s withdrawal was believed to have contributed to Mr. Yoon’s victory, there are still worries about factional feuding among Mr. Ahn and Mr. Yoon’s associates, observers say.

South Korea’s constitution limits a president to a single five-year term, so Mr. Moon could not seek reelection. Mr. Moon came to power in 2017 after conservative President Park Geun-hye was impeached and ousted from office over a huge corruption scandal.

With conservatives initially in shambles after Ms. Park’s fall, Mr. Moon’s approval rating at one point hit 83% as he pushed hard to achieve reconciliation with North Korea and delve into alleged corruption by past conservative leaders. He eventually faced strong backlash as talks on North Korea’s nuclear program faltered and his anti-corruption drive raised questions of fairness.

The tentative voter turnout was 77.1%, the fifth highest ever since the country restored direct presidential elections in 1987 following decades of military dictatorship, according to the National Election Commission.

This story was reported by the Associated Press. 

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