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South Korea's President Park impeached in parliamentary vote

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South Korea's President Park impeached in parliamentary vote

By Ju-min Park and Jack Kim | SEOUL

South Korean lawmakers on Friday voted overwhelmingly to impeach President Park Geun-hye over an influence-peddling scandal, setting the stage for her to become the country's first elected leader to be pushed from office in disgrace.

Members of parliament voted by secret ballot with 234 in favor and 56 opposed, meaning dozens of members of Park's own conservative Saenuri Party backed the motion to remove her. At least 200 members of the 300-seat chamber needed to vote for the motion for it to pass.

Seven votes were disqualified, two members abstained and one member did not participate, the parliament speaker said.

The Constitutional Court must decide whether to uphold the motion, a process that could take up to 180 days. Park's duties were immediately assumed by Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn on an interim basis.

Park, 64, is accused of colluding with a friend and a former aide, both of whom have been indicted by prosecutors, to pressure big businesses to donate to two foundations set up to back her policy initiatives.

Park, who is serving a single five-year term that was set to end in February 2018, has denied wrongdoing but apologized for carelessness in her ties with her friend, Choi Soon-sil.

Park has been under heavy pressure to quit but this week said she would await the court's ruling on the impeachment vote.

Mass rallies have been held in the capital, Seoul, every Saturday for the past six weeks to press her to quit. Opinion polls show overwhelming public support for her impeachment.

Parliament was closed to the public on Friday on the orders of the speaker.

Hours before the vote, anti-Park activists scuffled with police as they tried to drive two tractors up to parliament's main gate, where more than a 1,000 protesters were gathered.

Police subsequently shut down traffic on a 10-lane highway in front of the parliament's grounds and blockaded a bridge leading to the area.

POLITICAL, ECONOMIC WORRIES

The daughter of a military ruler who led the country for 18 years before being assassinated by his disgruntled spy chief in 1979, Park would lose presidential immunity if she left office early, and could be prosecuted for abuse of power and bribery, among other charges.

A poll released on Friday showed her approval rating at 5 percent, a slight improvement from a record low 4 percent.

The survey by Gallup Korea - which is not affiliated with U.S.-based Gallup, Inc. - showed 81 percent of respondents supported impeachment.

If the motion passes, the Constitutional Court will determine whether parliament followed due process and whether there are sufficient grounds for impeachment, a process that will involve arguments from the two sides in public hearings.

Prime Minister Hwang, who post is largely ceremonial, will assume interim presidential powers while the court deliberates.

RELATED COVERAGE

South Korea President Park to hold cabinet meeting after impeachment vote: Yonhap
Hwang takes the helm at a time of heightened tension with North Korea.

South Korea's economic outlook is also worsening, in part because of the internal political uncertainty, as well as worry about the impact of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's policies on trade and foreign affairs.

The 9-member Constitutional Court is considered conservative in its makeup but some of its former judges have said the case against Park is strong and was likely to be approved.

In 2004, parliament impeached then-president Roh Moo-hyun, suspending his powers for 63 days while the court reviewed the decision, which it overturned.

The most-searched items on leading web portal Naver on Friday were related to what happened around Roh's impeachment.

The prime minister at the time, Goh Kun, said in a 2013 memoir that he had decided to stay "low key" while he held the reins of power.

"Even if his duty was suspended, President Roh was staying at the Blue House residence. There was no need to create unnecessary tension,” Goh wrote.

(Additional reporting by Cynthia Kim, Nataly Pak, Se Young Lee and Kim Daewoung; Writing by Tony Munroe and Jack Kim; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore, Robert Birsel)


http://www.reuters.com/article/us-southkorea-politics-idUSKBN13X2JS
 
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South Korea's President Park impeached in parliamentary vote

By Ju-min Park and Jack Kim | SEOUL

South Korean lawmakers on Friday voted overwhelmingly to impeach President Park Geun-hye over an influence-peddling scandal, setting the stage for her to become the country's first elected leader to be pushed from office in disgrace.

Members of parliament voted by secret ballot with 234 in favor and 56 opposed, meaning dozens of members of Park's own conservative Saenuri Party backed the motion to remove her. At least 200 members of the 300-seat chamber needed to vote for the motion for it to pass.

Seven votes were disqualified, two members abstained and one member did not participate, the parliament speaker said.

The Constitutional Court must decide whether to uphold the motion, a process that could take up to 180 days. Park's duties were immediately assumed by Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn on an interim basis.

Park, 64, is accused of colluding with a friend and a former aide, both of whom have been indicted by prosecutors, to pressure big businesses to donate to two foundations set up to back her policy initiatives.

Park, who is serving a single five-year term that was set to end in February 2018, has denied wrongdoing but apologized for carelessness in her ties with her friend, Choi Soon-sil.

Park has been under heavy pressure to quit but this week said she would await the court's ruling on the impeachment vote.

Mass rallies have been held in the capital, Seoul, every Saturday for the past six weeks to press her to quit. Opinion polls show overwhelming public support for her impeachment.

Parliament was closed to the public on Friday on the orders of the speaker.

Hours before the vote, anti-Park activists scuffled with police as they tried to drive two tractors up to parliament's main gate, where more than a 1,000 protesters were gathered.

Police subsequently shut down traffic on a 10-lane highway in front of the parliament's grounds and blockaded a bridge leading to the area.

POLITICAL, ECONOMIC WORRIES

The daughter of a military ruler who led the country for 18 years before being assassinated by his disgruntled spy chief in 1979, Park would lose presidential immunity if she left office early, and could be prosecuted for abuse of power and bribery, among other charges.

A poll released on Friday showed her approval rating at 5 percent, a slight improvement from a record low 4 percent.

The survey by Gallup Korea - which is not affiliated with U.S.-based Gallup, Inc. - showed 81 percent of respondents supported impeachment.

If the motion passes, the Constitutional Court will determine whether parliament followed due process and whether there are sufficient grounds for impeachment, a process that will involve arguments from the two sides in public hearings.

Prime Minister Hwang, who post is largely ceremonial, will assume interim presidential powers while the court deliberates.

RELATED COVERAGE

South Korea President Park to hold cabinet meeting after impeachment vote: Yonhap
Hwang takes the helm at a time of heightened tension with North Korea.

South Korea's economic outlook is also worsening, in part because of the internal political uncertainty, as well as worry about the impact of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's policies on trade and foreign affairs.

The 9-member Constitutional Court is considered conservative in its makeup but some of its former judges have said the case against Park is strong and was likely to be approved.

In 2004, parliament impeached then-president Roh Moo-hyun, suspending his powers for 63 days while the court reviewed the decision, which it overturned.

The most-searched items on leading web portal Naver on Friday were related to what happened around Roh's impeachment.

The prime minister at the time, Goh Kun, said in a 2013 memoir that he had decided to stay "low key" while he held the reins of power.

"Even if his duty was suspended, President Roh was staying at the Blue House residence. There was no need to create unnecessary tension,” Goh wrote.

(Additional reporting by Cynthia Kim, Nataly Pak, Se Young Lee and Kim Daewoung; Writing by Tony Munroe and Jack Kim; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore, Robert Birsel)


http://www.reuters.com/article/us-southkorea-politics-idUSKBN13X2JS

Hopefully this will spell the end of the conservative radical hawkish Grand National Party (New Frontier Party) from South Korean political landscape for a while and Korea returns to the Sunshine Policy of DP.

Southwest voter base having control over the government would mean end of radical pro-Americanism and a more balanced and friendly relations with China, including a possible termination of a very destabilizing THAAD project.

So far so good.
 
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S.Korean parliament passes bill to impeach president Park Geun-hye
Source: Xinhua Published: 2016/12/9

2f10a2bf-1b16-49bd-93ca-3362b003a3e2.jpeg


Protesters carry an effigy of South Korean President Park Geun-Hye during a rally in central Seoul on Monday. Hundreds of thousands of protestors marched for the sixth straight week on Saturday to demand her ouster and arrest ahead of an impeachment vote in parliament. Photo: AFP


South Korean parliament overwhelmingly passed a historic bill Friday to impeach scandal-scarred President Park Geun-hye as it gained the two-thirds majority vote.

The final tally was 234 votes cast in favor of impeachment, with 56 against and 2 abstentions. Seven votes were invalid. One legislator did not take part in the voting.

President Park will be stripped of all powers immediately after receiving the copied result on paper. It is expected to take 3-4 hours for the document to reach the impeached president.

The first South Korean female leader became the country's second president impeached by the National Assembly.

Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn is to become acting president, temporarily assuming presidential power while the constitutional court weighs the case for as long as 180 days.

The impeachment was overwhelmingly passed as there are 172 opposition and independent lawmakers in the 300-seat assembly.

Before the vote, about 210 legislators were forecast to vote yes considering the number of ruling Saenuri Party lawmakers who are not loyal to President Park.

The number of votes in favor indicates over 20 pro-Park faction members cast secret ballots in favor of the president's impeachment. Among Saenuri lawmakers, 62 members voted for it, with 56 against.

The vote started right after a quarter-hour speech by a lawmaker to explain the impeachment proposal, which was put forward last Saturday by the opposition bloc.

It took just over an hour to make the proposal speech, cast ballots and count votes. Legislators voted one by one on printed ballot paper inside closed booths.

The parliament picked the traditional way of voting to prevent a possible manipulation in electronic vote, which the unicameral assembly usually takes in passing bills.
 
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Hopefully this will spell the end of the conservative radical hawkish Grand National Party (New Frontier Party) from South Korean political landscape for a while and Korea returns to the Sunshine Policy of DP.

Southwest voter base having control over the government would mean end of radical pro-Americanism and a more balanced and friendly relations with China, including a possible termination of a very destabilizing THAAD project.

So far so good.

It won't.

National Policies like these are very well thought, and require support and urgency from a big coalition.

Here, only the president has changed.

The foreign policy think tanks are the same, the foreign policy bureacracy is the same, the political factions are the same, the people are the same.

It will be foolhardy and too optimistic to think that this will change any thing with regards to China.
 
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It won't.

National Policies like these are very well thought, and require support and urgency from a big coalition.

Here, only the president has changed.

The foreign policy think tanks are the same, the foreign policy bureacracy is the same, the political factions are the same, the people are the same.

It will be foolhardy and too optimistic to think that this will change any thing with regards to China.

To understand the SK political dynamics, you need a long, comprehensive study. It is my field, and I teach EA politics so I know what I am talking about.

If you knew the level of radical departure from the past under the conservative government, you would also know that it is equally possible to make another U-turn.

But still, her being impeached does not mean her party is leaving the government. She will be replaced. But, if people are angry enough, they may elect another DP candidate.

You know how things were different under Roh Moo-hyun, right?

***

Impeached S.Korean president to gravely accept parliamentary decision
Source: Xinhua Published: 2016/12/9

Impeached South Korean President Park Geun-hye said that she is gravely accepting the parliamentary decision to remove her from office after her impeachment motion was passed through the National Assembly with an overwhelming support.

"I'm gravely accepting parliamentary and public voices, and wish the current turmoil comes to a stable end," Park said at a meeting with cabinet members in the presidential office after the impeachment bill obtained the two-thirds majority vote.

Park will maintain the title of president, but she will be stripped of all presidential powers while the constitutional court reviews her case. Park's legal authority was stopped at about 7 p.m. local time after formally receiving a copied result on the vote.

Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn will take over, becoming acting president while the trial gets under way for as long as 180 days to determine whether to permanently force Park out.

The 300-member assembly passed the bill, proposed last Saturday by the opposition bloc, with 234 legislators voting for and 56 opposing. Seven votes were invalid, and two abstained. One lawmaker refused to take part in the voting which was broadcast live on TV.

Park apologized to people for causing the national turmoil because of her lack of virtue and carelessness at a time when the country's security and economy both are in troubles.

The first South Korean female leader vowed to calmly and composedly address the court ruling and investigation by a special prosecutor who is forecast to launch an independent probe into the case as early as next week.

At the potentially last meeting with cabinet members until the court's ruling, Park asked for them to make efforts to minimize vacuum of state affairs, including economic and security affairs, by uniting with each other as Prime Minister Hwang as the central figure.
 
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It won't.

National Policies like these are very well thought, and require support and urgency from a big coalition.

Here, only the president has changed.

The foreign policy think tanks are the same, the foreign policy bureacracy is the same, the political factions are the same, the people are the same.

It will be foolhardy and too optimistic to think that this will change any thing with regards to China.
lmao,u have zero knowledge of politics in Korea....
All your information is from Quora including you knowledge of PISA/IQ right?
 
.
It won't.

National Policies like these are very well thought, and require support and urgency from a big coalition.

Here, only the president has changed.

The foreign policy think tanks are the same, the foreign policy bureacracy is the same, the political factions are the same, the people are the same.

It will be foolhardy and too optimistic to think that this will change any thing with regards to China.

You have no understanding of Korean politics. the Minjoo party aka Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) are anti THAAD. they are making opposition to THAAD an official party policy. They are going to gain the legislature and presidency. Park Geun-hye right now have 5% approval rating. however, they could cave to pressure from trump and keep deploy THAAD but they are very Pro-china.
 
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End of chaos urged in S. Korea after Park's impeachment
2016-12-11 09:01 | Xinhua | Editor: Feng Shuang

U669P886T1D237238F12DT20161211090153.jpg

South Korean parliament kicks off vote on presidential impeachment in Seoul Dec. 9, 2016.
(Xinhua/Kim Ho Min)

Different sides in South Korea have called for efforts to end the political chaos and minimize the vacuum of state affairs, after the National Assembly on Friday overwhelmingly passed a motion to impeach scandal-scarred President Park Geun-hye.

"For the past months, the state affairs have been virtually paralyzed. Since the impeachment motion has been passed, the confusion must end," National Assembly Speaker Chung Sye-kyun said, adding he hoped the passage will eradicate uncertainties.

The final tally was 234 votes in favor of impeachment, with 56 against, which far exceeded the two-thirds threshold needed to oust the president in the 300-member parliament.

The impeachment motion claims that Park gravely violated laws and the Constitution during her nearly four years in office.

It says Park's breach of the Constitution was grave enough to justify her removal from office.

The constitutional violations, according to the impeachment bill, include collusion with a longtime friend to extort money from companies and to give that confidante extraordinary sway over government decisions.

Park, 64, South Korea's first female leader, became the second president impeached by the National Assembly in the country's constitutional history.

"It is regrettable, and an unfortunate incident for our history. The confusion in state affairs must end here," said Chung Jin-suk, the floor leader of the ruling Saenuri Party.

"I'm gravely accepting parliamentary and public voices, and wish the current turmoil comes to a stable end," Park told a meeting with cabinet members in the presidential office after the assembly passed the impeachment.

Park's legal authority was stopped at about 7 p.m. local time Friday (1000 GMT) after formally receiving a copied result on the vote. Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn assumed the role of acting president.

"I accept the responsibilities as the acting president, which are stipulated in the Constitution, with a heavy heart, and will make all-out efforts to stably manage state affairs no matter how difficult the situation we are facing is," Hwang said during his address to the nation.

"I believe that under this grave situation, our state affairs must not be left adrift even for a moment," he added.

Hwang also called for the consolidation of the South Korea-U.S. alliance to safeguard national interests.

Whether Park will be impeached will depend on a final decision by the Constitutional Court, which has as long as 180 days to elaborate and rule on it.

If the nine-member court rules that the reasons are sufficient to impeach Park, the president will step down and a presidential election will be held within two months after the ruling. If the court overturns the motion, Park will take office again.

Late President Roh Moo-hyun was impeached by parliament on charges of illegal electioneering in 2004, but the motion was overturned by the Constitutional Court.

Choo Mi-ae, head of the main opposition Democratic Party, said the passage marks a victory for the people, urging the Constitutional Court to promptly deliver a conclusion on its review.

The court hastened its review of Park's impeachment on Friday, demanding she make her case by Dec. 16.

"We have reached an agreement that this impeachment is an extremely significant case that requires prompt progress," Bae Bo-yoon, spokesman for the Constitutional Court, told a press briefing at the court in central Seoul.

South Korean law experts predicted that the court is widely expected to back lawmakers' decision though it is unclear how it will rule.

"Constitutional justices will judge based on common sense and legal ground, but they are now in a situation to consider the people's rage and shock," a former constitutional justice on condition of anonymity was quoted by Yonhap as saying.

But former constitutional justice Lee She-yoon told Yonhap that the judges should not be influenced by public anger, calling for a prudent review of the case based on political neutrality.

Park's scandal prompted millions of demonstrators to hold candlelight vigils for six straight Saturdays, demanding Park's immediate resignation and impeachment.

Hundreds of thousands of people were expected to take to the streets of Seoul on Saturday for a scheduled protest turned celebration.

A Gallop Korea survey released Thursday showed that Park's approval rating was 5 percent and 81 percent of the interviewees supported her impeachment.


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Let's hope that South Korea can get back to business as usual after this unfortunate fiasco.
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