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Korea's 16th National Assembly Elections
Contents
Introduction
Elections in Democratizing Korea
Party Politics in the Democratic Era
Parties and Leaders in April 2000
Pressure from Civil Society
The Electoral System
Candidate Nomination
Campaign Issues
Costly and Corrupt Campaigns
Regionalism
Conclusion
Specialists
Further Reading
Introduction
General elections for the 16th term of the Korean National
Assembly are scheduled for April 13, 2000, and the public is harboring high hopes for a new breed of politicians
with vision, morality, and competence. People want politics that are clean, fair, responsible, responsive to popular
needs, and conducive to effective governance. Civic activism for ostracizing corrupt and incompetent established
politicians from their snug habitats is on the rise.
The growing outcries for "new politics" notwithstanding,
old electoral practices die hard. As in previous elections, confusing tactics abound, including parties changing
their names or splintering to form new ones. Little significant change has been made to the existing undemocratic
and closed process of candidate nomination. The campaign lacks debate over substantive policy issues. Instead,
parties and candidates encourage regional rivalries, exchange tirades, and slander each other. As in the past,
candidates’ heavy reliance on paid campaign workers and vote-gathering machines will make this election costly.
This Asian Update investigates several aspects of Korean
electoral politics. It begins with an overview of the development of elections and party politics since Korea’s
democratic transition. Then it depicts the players and rules of the game, and explains the nomination process,
the issues raised in the campaign, regional voting patterns, and possible election results. It concludes by examining
possible post-election political developments.
Elections in Democratizing Korea
In June 1987, general-turned-dictator Chun Doo Hwan conceded
to Korean citizens’ demand for democratization in the face of massive pro-democracy demonstrations. President Chun’s
handpicked successor, ex-general Roh Tae Woo, formally announced this concession, dubbed the June 29 Declaration,
which marked the beginning of Korea’s transition to democracy. Shortly afterward, political leaders and their parties
negotiated a new democratic constitution.
The Korean constitution provides for a presidential system
based on the separation of powers and checks-and-balances among the branches of government. For example, the National
Assembly, the country’s unicameral legislature, approves presidential actions such as nominating the prime minister,
making treaties, declaring war, and granting general amnesty. Unlike its U.S. prototype, however, the constitution
has tipped the power balance toward the president, who can exercise emergency powers, bypassing the National Assembly,
and impose diverse constraints on the body’s operation. According to the constitution, the president has less power
than his counterparts in the authoritarian era and is limited to only one term. Despite this, in political practice,
executive dominance has not vanished.
A series of historic presidential elections have taken place
in the democratic era. In the three-way presidential election held on December 16, 1987, Korean voters directly
elected a president for the first time in 16 years. Roh Tae Woo of the ruling Democratic Justice Party (DJP) squeezed
out an electoral victory with about 37 percent of the votes cast. Roh’s winning a plurality was largely due to
the split opposition vote between two prominent civilian leaders, Kim Young Sam of the Reunification Democratic
Party (RDP) and Kim Dae Jung of the Party for Peace and Democracy (PPD).
In early 1990, Kim Young Sam joined with President Roh to
form the Democratic Liberal Party (DLP). Kim became the party’s presidential nominee and won the December 1992
presidential election by securing 42 percent of the vote. His opponent, Kim Dae Jung of the Democratic Party (DP),
received 34 percent of the vote. Kim Young Sam was sworn in as the first civilian president since the military
intervention in 1961.
Five years later, in December 1997, Kim Dae Jung of the National
Congress for New Politics (NCNP) was elected in his fourth presidential bid. Kim narrowly defeated Lee Hoi Chang
of the Grand National Party (GNP) by 40.3 percent to 38.7 percent of the vote. Kim’s victory accomplished the first
peaceful transfer of presidential power to the opposition.
Throughout the history of the Korean Republic, there have
been 15 general elections for the National Assembly: 12 in the pre-democratic era and three since 1987.
In the 13th Assembly election, held on April 26, 1988, the
president’s party lost its majority for the first time in Korea’s legislative politics, with the national legislature
split among four parties. President Roh’s DJP captured 42 percent of the legislative seats, and Kim Dae Jung’s
PPD emerged as the largest opposition party with about 23 percent of the seats. Kim Young Sam’s RDP and Kim Jong
Pil’s New Democratic Republican Party (NDRP) won 20 percent and 12 percent of the seats, respectively.
In the 14th Assembly election held on March 24, 1992, the
ruling DLP led by President Roh and Kim Young Sam again was not able to obtain a majority of legislative seats,
coming up one seat short of a simple majority. The main opposition DP headed by Kim Dae Jung garnered almost a
third of all legislative seats. Within only two months of its formation, the Unification National Party (UNP) won
10 percent of the seats, sufficient to remain a significant force within the National Assembly. In brief, the stage
was set for a three-party competition.
The 15th Assembly election produced a similar pattern. President
Kim Young Sam’s New Korea Party (NKP) won a seat share of 46 percent, still short of a legislative majority. Kim
Dae Jung’s NCNP obtained 26 percent of total legislative seats. Kim Jong Pil’s United Liberal Democrats (ULD) became
the third-largest party, with 16 percent of the seats in the National Assembly. Another three-way competition had
emerged.
Party Politics in the Democratic Era
A typical Korean political party is personality-dominated
and rallies around a particular boss to maintain its vigor. As people know a chaebol conglomerate by the owner’s name, a political party is identified
with its leader: the nation’s president for the ruling party, and a charismatic or popular leader for an opposition
party. Although factions may exist within a party, power and influence in the party tend to gravitate toward one
person. A party without a strong focal leader will become fragile and is likely to fall apart.
Such a highly centralized party hardly practices internal
democracy and lacks a true base at the grassroots. Even when a party claims to have millions of members, it is
never a genuinely mass party. Ordinary members do not pay dues, or participate in the party by selecting candidates,
determining a platform, or any other means. People join a party not because they sympathize with its cause, but
because of personal connections, tangible benefits, and so on. Therefore, the number of party members, even though
massive, has nothing to do with party strength. It is no exaggeration to say that the fate of a party, including
a split or the formation of a new party, hinges on decisions made by its leader.
Political parties do not diverge much in ideology or policy
direction. The political parties represented in the National Assembly are all centrist or conservative, the ideological
horizon of Korean politics having been substantially reduced since the partition of the Korean peninsula. A progressive
party is hardly viable in politics built around existing parties and established politicians. Politicians with
progressive tints gain access to the national legislature through the conduit of existing parties.
In the authoritarian era, the issue of industrialization
versus democratization divided the ruling and opposing parties. In the democratic era, this issue has lost much
of its vigor, but no other major ideological or policy issue has crystallized in its stead. Of course, some extant
parties have developed their own images within a limited range of the ideological spectrum. For example, the public
sees Kim Jong Pil’s ULD as much more conservative than the NCNP or the GNP. But no party has fully translated its
ideological image into a concrete policy program. A party’s crucial electoral base is its leader’s native region.
The word "regionalist" succinctly describes Korean party politics.
Personality dominance, bossism, and lack of ideological distinction
all contribute to the instability of the party system. Prominent political leaders make and unmake political parties
all the time. Members of the National Assembly change party affiliation according to their relationship with the
leaders or political convenience. The ever-shifting parties, none of which lasts long enough for a voter to develop
an attachment, confuse ordinary citizens. In fact, many people have become disillusioned with existing parties.
As described above, in the 1988 13th Assembly elections,
four major parties competed: the DJP, RDP, PPD, and NDRP. Two years later the contour of party politics underwent
a sudden reshaping when President Roh, Kim Young Sam, and Kim Jong Pil made a surprise announcement on January
22, 1990, to merge their three parties into the DLP. This ruling party, a motley giant, commanded over a two-thirds
majority in the National Assembly. On the opposition side were two parties: Kim Dae Jung’s PPD, and the minor DP,
organized by a small fraction of Kim Young Sam’s former followers. These two merged under the banner of the DP
in the fall of 1991.
A third party was born just before the 14th Assembly election,
when Chung Ju Yung, founder of the Hyundai business conglomerate, organized the UNP. Soon after Kim Young Sam won
the 1992 presidential election, Kim Dae Jung withdrew from politics. Chung Ju Yung and his UNP were politically
buried after this presidential election. Legislative members formerly affiliated with the UNP were eventually absorbed
by other major parties or became independents. In 1994, a bipolar configuration emerged in party politics: the
DLP versus the DP.
During the period of the 14th Assembly, numerous legislative
members changed party affiliation yet again. In January 1995, Kim Jong Pil and his followers bolted from the DLP
when he was put under heavy pressure to resign from the leadership position. Kim Jong Pil subsequently founded
the ULD. Kim Dae Jung, allegedly retired from politics, kept a firm grip on the DP, and greatly influenced the
party’s strategies for local elections held in June 1995. Encouraged by the DP’s showing in these local elections,
Kim Dae Jung suddenly decided in the summer of 1995 to come back to the political stage. He organized the NCNP,
drawing his loyal followers away from the DP.
Another four-party system appeared, including the DLP, NCNP,
ULD, and DP. The ruling DLP changed its name to the NKP in late 1995, about four months prior to the 15th Assembly
election. The DP made a poor showing in the 15th Assembly election, effectively converting a four-party competition
into a three-party one. The DP later disbanded.
In the December 1997 presidential election, three major candidates
competed. The ruling NKP nominated Lee Hoi Chang. In the run-up to the election, Lee’s popularity dropped because
his two sons allegedly dodged military conscription. This induced Rhee In Je, the runner-up in the NKP contest
for the party’s nomination, to break away from the NKP and declare his candidacy under the banner of the New Party
by the People (NPP) in mid-September. By mid-November, Lee had managed to revamp his party by merging the NKP with
the minor DP into the GNP. The main opposition, the NCNP, unsurprisingly nominated Kim Dae Jung as its presidential
candidate. This Kim persuaded Kim Jong Pil of the ULD to withdraw in favor of an electoral coalition for Kim Dae
Jung’s triumph. The coalition was called "the DJP alliance," where the acronym stood for Dae Jung and
Jong Pil. (This should not be confused with the acronym for the Democratic Justice Party, which was headed by President
Chun and later by President Roh.)
When Kim Dae Jung was elected president, his NCNP could not
command a legislative majority, even combined with its junior coalition partner, the ULD. Over time the ruling
coalition gradually recruited legislative members from the opposition GNP. Also, Rhee In Je, together with the
legislative members of his NPP, was drawn into the NCNP in the fall of 1998. By co-opting legislative members from
the other side of the aisle, the ruling coalition finally managed to achieve a majority in the National Assembly.
Parties and Leaders in April 2000
It should come as no surprise that Korean political parties
refurbish or realign themselves before a nationwide election. In an effort to boost the ruling party’s legislative
strength less than three months before the April 2000 general election, President Kim Dae Jung reinvented the NCNP
by recruiting prominent civic activists and other high-visibility individuals and introducing the Millennium Democratic
Party (MDP). Kim appointed Rhee In Je chief campaign manager for the MDP. Rhee is also running for the National
Assembly as his native district’s representative in the Chungchong region, the ULD’s stronghold. Rhee’s decision
is seen as laying the groundwork for a presidential campaign of his own in 2002. The MDP has pledged to devote
itself to the so-called new politics, and it advocates democracy, a market economy, and productive welfare. The
ruling party claims to represent middle-class interests. It is allegedly committed to reform in not only political
but also business and public sectors.
Kim Jong Pil, the ULD leader, is also maneuvering to ensure
that his party remains a significant political force after April 13. Kim Jong Pil well matches President Kim in
political ingenuity and experience. He masterminded the military coup with the late President Park Chung Hee in
1961, founded the Korean Central Intelligence Agency (now the National Intelligence Service) and served as his
prime minister in the early 1970s. He later held the leadership position second to President Kim Young Sam, and
served again as prime minister during the first two years of the Kim Dae Jung administration.
In late February, the ULD officially severed its coalition
ties with the ruling MDP, in hopes of securing firmer support in its regional base. The ULD leadership cited several
reasons for quitting the DJP coalition. First, President Kim Dae Jung and his party have not fulfilled an agreement
to introduce a parliamentary system of government. Second, President Kim allegedly conspired with civic groups
in their campaign against senior conservative ULD politicians, including Kim Jong Pil. Third, Rhee In Je announced
his campaign for the National Assembly on ULD turf. And last, the MDP nominated many former student activists,
which is unacceptable to the ULD, a party seeking a grand alliance of conservative forces.
Under the leadership of Lee Hoi Chang, the opposition GNP
denied several faction leaders its nomination for the upcoming election. In a dramatic turn against Lee, these
political heavyweights blamed him for "privatizing" the party by fielding candidates personally loyal
to him, and seceded from the GNP to form the Democratic People’s Party (DPP) in early March. The DPP opposes both
President Kim Dae Jung and Lee Hoi Chang.
With the emergence of this splinter party from the GNP, the
election is turning into a four-way race among the MDP, the ULD, the GNP, and the DPP. Several other minor parties
will join the competition, but they remain largely inconspicuous.
Pressure from Civil Society
During the democratic transition of the late 1980s, civic
groups mobilized popular protest and exerted heavy pressure against the authoritarian regime. In politics after
democratic transition, civic groups continue to play an important role by articulating citizens’ demands for continuing
political reform and pressuring the government to address socioeconomic issues such as human rights, labor conditions,
economic justice, environmental protection, and so on. In the electoral process, civic groups try to ensure that
parties and candidates engage in clean and fair campaign practices.
Civic groups are conducting their own campaign of pressure
politics in this year’s election. Spurred by pent-up public anger at corrupt old politics, in mid-January 2000
the Citizens’ Coalition for Economic Justice released a list of politicians it deemed unfit for candidacy in the
upcoming election. Criteria for disqualification varied, from corruption and embezzlement to involvement in past
election irregularities, such as attempts to buy votes.
The blacklisting campaign peaked as the Citizens’ Alliance
for the 2000 General Elections (Citizens’ Alliance), an umbrella organization of more than 400 civic groups, announced
a list of 66 politicians considered unqualified in late January, and an additional list of 47 in early February.
The major reasons cited for blocking those politicians from running in the upcoming election were corruption, breaking
election laws, and destruction of the democratic and constitutional order.
In the number of politicians disqualified by the Citizens’
Alliance, the opposition GNP ranked first, above the two parties in the ruling coalition, the MDP and the ULD.
In terms of incumbent legislative members, however, the hardest hit was the ULD. Moreover, these lists included
Kim Jong Pil, the ULD leader, who had been an architect of the military coup in 1961. In response to the blacklisting
campaign, only the MDP expressed welcome, and it was a guarded one. The GNP raised suspicions about the civic group’s
link with the ruling circle, and questioned the standards applied for disqualifying its legislative members. The
ULD vehemently accused the Citizens’ Alliance of conspiring with the MDP to devastate the basic legal order and
ruin the status of conservatives.
Civic groups were also visible in the legislative process
of revising election law. In mid-January, the three parties finally made public a political reform package that
had taken them 13 months to negotiate. The contents of this package generated a startling public backlash. For
one thing, the rival political parties had reneged on an earlier promise to cut the membership size of the National
Assembly by about 10 percent in accordance with the economic restructuring necessitated by the IMF bailout. The
reform package also lacked any plan to improve fairness of representation and districting. Moreover, the parties
had agreed to increase the level of state subsidies for election campaigns by 50 percent, and to keep the extant
clause prohibiting civic groups from any involvement whatsoever in election campaigns.
The media and civic groups wasted no time accusing the political
parties of protecting their vested interests and of sabotaging urgent political reform. The Citizens’ Alliance
organized outdoor rallies and petition drives to make political parties reconsider the controversial reform package.
As a result, political parties and their leaders restarted the process. In the revision process, the National Assembly
organized a districting commission that included representatives of both political parties and civic groups. The
temporary panel reached a new districting plan that would reduce the number of legislative members by around 10
percent. The plan was then recommended to the National Assembly for review.
A new phase of civic mobilization for promoting democracy
seems to be underway. However, it should be noted that pressure from civil society has yet to bring about significant
political reform in the democratic era. Regardless of the blacklist campaign conducted by the Citizens’ Alliance,
four parties fielded at least 50 candidates considered unfit by the big civic group. Even the MDP, which appears
most favorable to civic group activism, nominated 10 or so politicians rejected by the Citizens’ Alliance. The
revised election law, ultimately passed by the National Assembly on February 10, does not guarantee civic groups
full freedom to participate in election campaigning. They are prohibited from holding outdoor rallies, distributing
leaflets, or collecting signatures.
The Electoral System
The Korean National Assembly is elected by a single-member
plurality system to which a nominal component of proportional representation (PR) is added. A voter casts a single
ballot to elect his or her district representative. In allocating nationwide PR seats, the vote for a district
candidate is counted as the vote for the candidate’s party list.
Most seats are filled by the plurality component. For example,
in the elections for the 15th Assembly, 253 of 299 legislative seats were elected from single-member districts,
and nationwide party lists filled the remaining 46 under the PR system. The nationwide at-large seats are divided
by allocating one seat to parties that have won no district seat but received at least three and not more than
five percent of the vote. The remaining seats are then divided among the parties with at least five district seats,
or with five percent or more of the vote, in proportion to each party’s share of the national vote.
Under this electoral system, larger parties gain a disproportionately
greater share of legislative seats. For instance, in 1996, the ruling NKP won 46 percent of the total seats with
35 percent of the vote. The fourth-largest party, the DP, suffered most under the system: it obtained only 5 percent
of the total seats with a bit more than 11 percent of the vote. For the splinter party, the PR component did not
much adjust the disproportion caused by the plurality component.
The electoral system discouraged the representation of not
only smaller parties but also that of minorities who are not concentrated in a particular geographical area. The
ratio of women to men in the National Assembly is a case in point. Female legislative members constitute on average
merely 2 percent of the Assembly. Furthermore, the system discriminates against newly emerging, alternative political
forces with fresh ideas.
Although the single-member plurality system is generally
associated with two-party government, this hasn’t been the case in Korea. Cleavage along regional lines keeps the
plurality from suppressing party fractionalization. A third or fourth party can survive as a significant political
force as long as it gains a substantial number of legislative seats from regionally concentrated support. The system
has neither brought about fair representation nor enabled a single party to secure a legislative majority.
Given that the single-member plurality component helped major
parties reap the disproportionate benefits of sweeping legislative seats in their regional strongholds, reform-minded
intellectuals and civic activists have argued for changing the single-member plurality component. Some alternatives
often suggested include the German two-vote mixed system, Japan’s newly introduced two-vote parallel system, or
other peculiar types of two-vote mixed systems.
At the beginning of 2000, President Kim Dae Jung and Prime
Minister Kim Jong Pil, leaders of the ruling coalition, agreed to adopt a Japanese-style two-vote system. If the
system is introduced, a voter will cast one ballot for the district representative and another ballot for a party
list under PR. The opposition GNP initially objected to this proposal. First of all, the GNP was concerned that
the system would likely induce the two parties in the ruling coalition to field a single candidate and campaign
jointly for him, especially in those districts where GNP candidates are strong. Under the existing system, it was
impossible for the NCNP (now the MDP) and the ULD to pursue an electoral coalition at the district level, because
the votes won by the district candidates would determine the number of each party’s PR seats.
Second, the GNP believed that the introduction of a Japanese-style
two-vote system would enhance the representation of minor parties in the National Assembly and hence weaken the
opposition’s strength. Nevertheless, the GNP agreed in mid-January to the reform package. By that time, a collaborative
election strategy became unfeasible for the ruling coalition, which looked likely to fall apart. Moreover, since
the reform package intended to increase the number of district seats by five and reduce PR seats by the same number,
it would not much hurt the GNP.
During the renegotiations over the revision of the election
law in late January and early February, the MDP and the GNP again expressed differences over two major issues.
One regarded districting and the membership size of the National Assembly. The districting commission recommended
setting the lower population limit of an electoral district at 90,000 and the upper limit at 350,000, a proposal
that would mean the reduction of district seats by 26. The MDP supported the idea, the GNP objected to it. The
opposition party favored the existing standards for districting–75,000 for the lower limit and 300,000 for the
upper limit–which would cut the number of district seats by only 10. The other issue was that of two ballots per
voter versus one ballot per voter. The MDP favored the former, whereas the GNP supported the latter.
Neither of the two large parties commanded a legislative
majority, and the ULD played a decisive role in the final passage of the election bill. It disagreed with the MDP
over districting and the number of legislative seats. Therefore, the size of membership is now set at 273 for the
16th Assembly, 26 seats down from the 15th. Out of the total seats, 227 will be elected from a single-member district,
and the remaining 46 seats under PR. On the other hand, the ULD stood by the GNP in maintaining the one-vote mixed
system: each voter will again cast a single ballot for his or her district representative in the forthcoming general
election. The ballots will be counted party by party nationwide for allocating at-large seats under a PR procedure.
There is one other reform measure that merits attention:
to guarantee equal political opportunity for women, the new election law stipulates that parties assign 30 percent
of the candidate positions under PR to women. It remains to be seen if this provision will enhance female representation
in the National Assembly.
Candidate Nomination
Korean law stipulates, in vague terms, that the nomination
of candidates for public office be made through a democratic procedure within a party. Reform-minded intellectuals
and civic-group representatives also urge political parties to nominate candidates in a democratic and transparent
way.
The reality of candidate selection and nomination, however,
is far removed from the legal prescriptions. The candidate nomination process is typically top-down. A party establishes
an ad hoc screening committee for candidacy at its national headquarters. The committee is usually composed of
party officials loyal to the top leader or sympathetic with his cause. It reviews applications for candidacy or
searches for candidates itself. A hopeful is evaluated by criteria such as public visibility, loyalty to the party,
connections with the top leader, and likelihood of victory. During the review process, the committee communicates
often with the top leadership. If factions exist within the party, the committee normally takes into account each
group’s respective share of the candidates. The leader accepts or rejects party nominees from the committee’s list.
All this happens behind closed doors, and the backroom review is vulnerable to all kinds of dirty deals.
On February 17, the ruling MDP announced its list of candidates
approved by President Kim for 166 of the 227 district seats. It replaced approximately 30 percent of the incumbent
district representatives with new figures. The replacement rate was lower than expected by the public and initially
announced by the party. Moreover, the nomination list included several politicians rejected previously by civic
groups.
The nomination publicized by the GNP on February 18 surprised
many people, affiliated with the party or not. Although the GNP had dropped less than 30 percent of the party’s
incumbent legislative members elected from districts, the cuts included several faction bosses and senior politicians.
A remarkable replacement was made for the districts composed of the city of Taegu and surrounding North Kyongsang
Province (known as the TK region) and the city of Pusan and its adjacent South Kyongsang Province (known as the
PK region). The TK and PK regions together constitute the Yongnam region, the southeastern part of the Korean peninsula,
which is the bastion of GNP electoral support. By purging the old guard, Lee Hoi Chang, the GNP’s leader, seemingly
aimed not only to consolidate leadership of his party but also to grant the public’s wish for new politics. Lee’s
bold move, however, caused fiery reactions from big-name politicians who didn’t make the list and their sympathizers.
Eventually, they launched a new party, the DPP, under the "anti—Kim Dae Jung and anti—Lee Hoi Chang"
banner.
In an effort to thwart a serious challenge from the DPP,
Lee Hoi Chang expressed regret over the tumult caused by the nomination. He offered a post-election confidence
vote on his leadership. Lee even visited former President Kim Young Sam, who remains influential in the PK region,
to try to gain his support.
On the same day that the GNP made public its list of party
nominees, the ULD also announced its candidates for district seats. Of those incumbent district representatives
who wanted to run again for the National Assembly, no one was denied renomination. The DPP, which joined the electoral
race late, rushed to recruit hopefuls for legislative office. This party’s nomination list naturally included a
good number of established politicians and new political aspirants who failed to win the endorsement of not only
the GNP but the MDP and the ULD as well.
Campaign Issues
Outside extraordinary times, Korean elections have lacked
any major debate on substantive policy. This should come as no surprise given that a party’s identity is based
on its leader’s personality, not policy. The constant flux of political parties leaves no time for a distinct policy
image to develop. Either the basic nature of a party’s political regime and leadership (for example, whether it’s
clean or corrupt), or overarching national objectives, such as sweeping reform to restructure the economy or politics,
are what constitute campaign issues–not specific policy matters.
The December 1987 presidential competition among Roh Tae
Woo and opposition leaders Kim Young Sam and Kim Dae Jung, centered around the legitimacy of the military’s authoritarianism
and political stability in the nascent democratic era. Campaigners in the 13th Assembly election held four months
later focused on the moral and ethical basis of political leadership, such as bribery scandals.
The sluggish national economy emerged as a significant campaign
issue in the 14th Assembly election in March 1992. Chung Ju Yung, the UNP leader, mobilized electoral support based
on his success as an entrepreneur. Still, in this election, basic questions of government, such as political stability
versus checks-and-balances, remained significant.
In the December 1992 presidential election, national goals
concerning governance overwhelmed economic issues. Kim Young Sam of the ruling DLP promised to create a "New
Korea" and to practice "reform amid stability." On the opposition side, Kim Dae Jung campaigned
for an "interparty shift of power" and "grand national reconciliation." The first was a standard
campaign theme for the main opposition. The second was put forward to stretch Kim Dae Jung’s support base beyond
his stronghold, the Honam region (the Cholla provinces, the southwestern part of the peninsula). Chung Ju Yung’s
campaign focused on the sagging economy, and he sounded as if he would fix the economic ills with a magic touch.
Over time, his promises were increasingly seen as unrealistic. Chung’s UNP was not as successful in capitalizing
on voters’ economic concerns in the presidential election as it had been in the 14th Assembly election held nine
months before.
In the 15th Assembly election in 1996, the ruling NKP stressed
stability and reform. Two opposition parties, the NCNP and the ULD, advocated effective checks on the power of
the Kim Young Sam administration. The DP, the fourth party, called for an end to the era of the "Three Kims"–Kim
Young Sam, Kim Dae Jung, and Kim Jong Pil–and for a generational change in leadership. As in other Assembly elections
lacking national policy issues, candidates emphasized local matters such as development projects at the district
level.
The national economy was in exceptionally bad shape during
the December 1997 presidential election. The IMF bailout, determined only two weeks before election day, triggered
mounting public criticism of the management of the national economy. Kim Dae Jung convinced voters that overcoming
the economic crisis required a shift of power to the opposition.
In this upcoming general election, the ruling and opposing
parties are again debating political stability versus checks-and-
balances. The ruling MDP is presenting "economic leap forward amid stability," or "reform amid stability,"
as its major campaign theme. The party leaders, including President Kim Dae Jung, suggest that everything will
go fine if the MDP secures a legislative majority. Furthermore, they claim that the party’s inability to do so
will have a negative impact on the economy, the stock market, labor issues, and inter-Korean relations. To counter
the argument, the GNP is emphasizing the necessity of a strong opposition to hold the "arrogant and overbearing"
government in check. The GNP tries to remind voters that it is the only effective alternative to the MDP. GNP leaders
keep saying that support for another opposition party, particularly the DPP, would only help the ruling party.
The April 13 election, to be held at the midpoint of President
Kim’s term, is regarded as an interim evaluation of his administration. The GNP is asking voters to pass judgment
on the administration’s abuse of power and its policy failures over the past two years. The GNP is charging the
Kim administration with increased national debt, a widening economic gap between haves and have-nots, and favoritism
toward the Honam region in its personnel policy.
The GNP likes to cite a series of scandals that troubled
President Kim in the summer and fall of 1999. In the so-called "furgate" or "boutique" scandal,
a business tycoon was imprisononed on charges of smuggling huge sums of U.S. dollars abroad and embezzling company
funds. In attempting to save him from criminal prosecution, the wife of the minister for affairs of national unification
allegedly asked the businessman’s wife to pay for furs bought by the justice minister’s wife. This scandal led
to the justice minister’s dismissal and arrest. Another scandal involved the former head of the public security
department, the supreme public prosecutors’ office. He was indicted on charges of instigating a labor strike at
the Korea Minting and Securities Printing Corporation in order to take credit for cracking down on the illegal
strike and facilitating the corporation’s restructuring efforts. In still another case, the environment minister,
who was also a famous actress, was forced to resign for accepting a cash gift from a Korean businessman residing
in Russia after she had performed in Moscow while in office. To top it all off, the governor of Kyonggi, a member
of the ruling party, was arrested for taking a bribe from a banker.
Despite the GNP’s strategy, the wave of scandals has already
subsided and now draws little public attention. Whenever the issue of presidential performance is raised, the ruling
party contends that President Kim has pulled Korea out of economic crisis in spite of the opposition’s uncooperative
behavior. Survey results about President Kim’s popularity and public perceptions regarding his job performance
vary according to method and wording of questions. Still, they tend to indicate that a good majority of voters
see the nation’s president and his overall performance in a positive light. President Kim no longer enjoys the
high rate of popularity of his honeymoon period. But no other political leader is perceived more favorably than
him.
Whereas policy debate is not likely to mobilize voter support,
regionalism is a significant factor in Korean elections. Regionalism prompts sentimental reaction rather than realistic
reflection. There is a deep-
seated rivalry, sometimes animosity, among regions, notably between Yongnam and Honam. This cleavage has deepened
in the past three or four decades due to the continued rule of the Yongnam-born political elite, regionally unbalanced
socioeconomic development, regional favoritism in government jobs, and so forth.
In the current campaigning, controversies over regionalism
in politics have flared up again. In his speech commemorating the March 1 Independence Movement in Taegu, President
Kim Dae Jung suggested that regionalism originated in 1961’s military coup. This remark upset Kim Jong Pil, who
had masterminded the military intervention. At a party rally in the Chungchong region, he retorted that Kim Dae
Jung himself had sparked regional sentiment in the 1971 presidential election in order to appeal to the Honam voters.
Lee Hoi Chang entered the fray by arguing that Kim Dae Jung had deepened regionalism in politics during his second
presidential bid in 1987. Politicians exploit the issue of regionalism in various ways to boost electoral support
based on voters’ emotional response.
Costly and Corrupt Campaigns
The 1987 presidential election and the 13th Assembly election
held in 1988 were not clean or fair but tainted by campaign violence. Allegations of corruption were rampant in
the 1987 presidential campaign. In the subsequent Assembly election as well, the media, the authorities, and watchdog
civic groups reported that some candidates and their campaign workers had attempted to buy votes with gifts, goodies,
food, spa trips, and cash.
Civic groups and the opposition also complained of election
rigging and corrupt practices in the 14th Assembly election and the 1992 presidential election, but despite these
deficiencies, these elections showed signs of gradual progress in the disappearance of campaign violence. The 15th
Assembly election held in 1996 was on the surface largely fair. However, the election was still costly, with many
candidates reportedly exceeding legal ceilings of campaign spending according to post-election media reports based
on interviews with the candidates. One reason elections are expensive is that few campaign workers serve as volunteers;
they are treated with meals and paid for their assistance. In 1996 even some ordinary voters still expected to
be paid for their votes.
The 1997 presidential election made a significant break with
the past in that the illegal campaign practices accountable for high costs dwindled drastically. The election law
revised before the presidential election prohibited candidates from holding massive outdoor rallies, in which candidates
had previously expended enormous financial resources to mobilize large audiences. Instead, candidates campaigned
through state-
sponsored mass media. At that time nobody could afford an expensive campaign because of the deeply troubled national
economy.
The overall tendency of the recent elections toward fairness
notwithstanding, Korean concern about high costs and clandestine voter mobilization remains. Many election watchers
believe that the upcoming general election will be no less costly than the last one. The official campaign runs
from March 28 through April 12. But parties and candidates started campaigning a few months ago, in the name of
normal party activities or in other more sophisticated and covert ways, such as candidates’ meeting with voters
in small informal groups. The parties’ and candidates’ expenses before the official campaign period will double
or triple those incurred during the official campaign period.
Why do the candidates in the legislative race spend so much
money? What do they spend it on? To answer these questions, one needs to understand the character of district parties.
The district party is essentially a political machine geared toward the success of a particular politician. The
organization consists of patron-client ties, in which the politician provides benefits and favors in return for
support. In addition to his or her district party organization, every politician maintains informal vote-gathering
machines, such as friendship societies and alumni and recreation groups. Politicians perform as guardians of these
informal groups, in return for funds.
Extravagance in politics peaks at election times. Candidates
spend lavishly, ignoring or skillfully violating the laws regulating campaign money. Huge sums of it go to the
nurturing of district parties and other vote-gathering machines, and to the provision of food, goodies, or other
services for voters. New party members are often paid "gratitude fees" to reward them for their participation,
and party membership swells in election seasons. Large sums are expended to encourage attendance at campaign events
and party rallies. In addition to campaign workers being fed and paid, there are the usual costs of renting and
running offices, conducting opinion polls, printing and distributing pamphlets and handbills, and so on. As a last
resort, cash is distributed in exchange for votes.
Election law requires every candidate’s campaign manager
to report the money spent during the official campaign period to the National Election Commission after the election.
A winner can be disqualified for spending above the ceiling or dishonest reporting. Post-election reports always
claim that the candidate stayed within legal spending limits. In theory, campaign expenses are nicely controlled
in Korea. In practice, everybody knows that the official reports account for only a small portion of total expenses.
Several nominees have withdrawn from the race because of
such money politics. A medical doctor at a university hospital nominated by the MDP quit the contest, saying: "I
got sick and tired of money-tainted electoral politics, as people I encountered in my campaign never failed to
link everything to money. After my winning the party ticket, I received streams of phone calls. Some congratulated
me, but others solicited money in return for their support. I was finally convinced that politics was not the way
for me to follow."
The lack of a policy contest frequently leads to personalized
negative campaigning. Korean elections abound with personal attacks, mudslinging, groundless accusations, and the
like. Recently, the Internet has also been used for such negative campaigning. In early March, a ULD nominee for
a Seoul district was caught vilifying his opponents in cyberspace and arrested on charges of slandering his rival
candidates. He had accused the ruling MDP candidate in his district of being a communist sympathizer, and portrayed
his GNP rival as a candidate who sold himself for money and power.
Regionalism
Korean voters often support the candidate of the party whose
leader comes from the voter’s region. In the event that no significant party in the legislative race is led by
a politician from the voter’s region, the voter may still engage in regional voting, by not supporting the candidate
whose party is headed by a politician from a rival region. In 1997, no major presidential candidate came from the
Yongnam region, so Yongnam voters cast their ballots against Kim Dae Jung, who came from the Honam region.
Regional voting either for or against a candidate means that
a candidate or party either reaps a sweeping victory in a particular region or loses dismally elsewhere. The 1997
presidential election is a case in point. Kim Dae Jung received an overwhelming percentage of the vote in the Honam
region: 97.3 in Kwangju, 92.3 in North Cholla, and 94.6 in South Cholla. In contrast, Lee Hoi Chang, the runner-up,
won 1.7 percent of the vote in Kwangju, 4.6 percent in North Cholla, and 3.2 percent in South Cholla. Honam natives
are well-known for rallying around their favorite son, Kim Dae Jung. They have felt discriminated against under
former presidents Park Chung Hee, Chun Doo Hwan, Roh Tae Woo, and Kim Young Sam, all from the Yongnam region. The
citizens of Kwangju have not forgotten being brutally crushed for resisting General Chun’s military takeover in
1980. In the Yongnam region, Lee Hoi Chang collected a solid majority of the votes: 53.3 percent in Pusan, 72.7
percent in Taegu, 51.4 percent in Ulsan, 61.9 percent in North Kyongsang, and 55.1 percent in South Kyongsang.
By contrast, Kim Dae Jung garnered roughly 15 percent or less of the votes cast in each of these cities and provinces.
The 13th Assembly election in 1988 also showed dramatic results.
Roh Tae Woo’s DJP won all the seats in his home city of Taegu, and the party won 81 percent of the district seats
in North Kyongsang. Kim Dae Jung’s PPD vividly demonstrated its regional strength by capturing 37 of the 38 districts
in the Honam region. Except for the districts in the Honam region and Seoul, the PPD did not win a single district
seat. Regional voting helped Kim Young Sam’s RDP to sweep his home city of Pusan. The RDP also made a strong showing
in South Kyongsang, but it missed outbidding the ruling DJP. Finally, voters rallied in the wake of Kim Jong Pil’s
desperate campaigning in Chungchong, which helped him survive as a political leader. The NDRP obtained 94 percent
of the districts seats allocated to South Chungchong.
In April 2000’s four-way competition, the MDP and the GNP
are much stronger than the other two parties, the ULD and the DPP. At this writing, most poll watchers predict
that no single party will win a legislative majority of 137 seats or more of the total 273 seats. The MDP and the
GNP are neck-in-neck for the largest share of legislative seats. Either party, which can secure 120 seats or so,
is likely to finish first. The ULD is likely to finish a distant third, winning roughly 30 seats. Thus far, it
seems that the DPP will have enormous difficulty securing at least 20 seats. This party’s post-election political
fortune is precarious, because a party with less than 20 seats is not allowed by the National Assembly to form
a legislative party group. The DPP has been largely confined to a spoiler role, stealing chiefly pro-opposition
votes.
Each party’s electoral strength varies from one region to
another. In the Honam region, the MDP is pretty much invincible except for one or two pro-MDP independents who
could win. Not surprisingly, the ULD is remarkably strong in the Chungchong region, but this party seems weakened
there. This is partly because the MDP with Rhee In Je at the front is invading the region. Also, the GNP remains
a significant force, especially in North Chungchong. In the Yongnam region, the GNP maintains a competitive edge,
though the DPP and the ULD outflank it in some districts. In each of the other regions, including Seoul, Inchon,
Kyonggi Province, Kangwon Province, and Cheju Island, the parties’ chances for victory more or less resemble the
nationwide electoral landscape.
Conclusion
The April 13 election will be an important test of Korean
democracy. Though the Korean electoral process has steadily improved for the cleaner and fairer, it still leaves
much to be desired. Regional cleavages, vividly manifest during the campaign, hinder political leaders from forming
a broad, national support base. Extralegal or illegal campaign practices, together with corrupt money politics,
undermine the fairness of the electoral process. Virulent personal attacks and the absence of a policy contes weaken
the role of elections as an opportunity to evaluate past leadership performance and discuss the nation’s future
direction. The extent to which these drawbacks can be overcome or reduced will indicate how much progress has been
made in achieving genuine democratic governance and accountability. Another matter of great concern is how many
fresh faces will appear in the new legislature. The forthcoming election will test the possibility of generational
change in political leadership.
The election results will greatly affect what President Kim
Dae Jung can achieve and how during his three remaining years of office. At this writing, according to many poll
watchers, the ruling MDP could win at most 45 percent or so of the seats, making it the largest legislative party
but still short of a simple majority. As in the early days of his presidency, Kim Dae Jung as a minority president
will face the immediate problem of building a working majority in the National Assembly. In the event the opposition
GNP finishes first, this challenge to President Kim will be much more difficult to overcome. With the GNP as the
largest party, legislative deadlock would likely prevail, hampering the minority president from achieving anything
significant.
The MDP would naturally try to absorb independents in order
to increase its numbers. Then President Kim would most likely try to restore the DJP alliance, though it seems
that would be almost impossible. Nevertheless, Kim Jong Pil may cooperate with President Kim out of political expediency.
The MDP would probably try to recruit, on an individual basis,
legislative members from the small DPP or even from the GNP. As far as GNP politicians are concerned, however,
they will be the last to be co-opted into the ruling MDP. After the purge of big shots during the nomination of
candidates, the GNP should emerge as a more disciplined party.
The consolidation of Korean democracy hinges on whether Presdient
Kim can build a working relationship with the opposition and engage in a dialogue on an issue-by-issue basis. President
Kim is likely to face no easy policy challenges. Most people agree that Korea has emerged from its financial crisis.
But the success of President Kim’s reforms to build a sound market economy remains to be seen. Ironically, restructuring
the economy has benefited the establishment, including the chaebol, which are widely seen as the culprit in the economic crisis. Small
and medium businesses and the middle and lower classes suffered in comparision. Growing income and wealth discrepancies
are an increasingly important concern. The chaebol reform introduced significant measures to improve corporate governance.
But except for the Daewoo group, the top chaebol conglomerates have reinforced their oligopoly in the market.
On the other hand, in the eyes of the chaebol, the
government still commands and controls the corporate sector. State intervention in the economy is not unlike authoritarian
practices of the past. The Kim Dae Jung administration has made great efforts to generate organized labor’s support
for economic reform by establishing a tripartite commission that encompasses the government, labor, and management.
Nonetheless, organized labor is ready to resume its militant and confrontational tactics if its demands go unmet.
Critics also say that President Kim has so far achieved little
in reforming the public sector and, more important, inefficient and uncompromising old-fashioned politics. Regardless
of politicians’ incessant lip service, the pledged political reform has not made substantive headway. President
Kim blames the GNP for its uncooperative behavior in this regard. The opposition stresses that President Kim himself
is part of the "Three Kims" phenomenon that symbolizes outmoded politics. The public has become increasingly
disillusioned by the stalemate on the reform agenda.
The results of this upcoming legislative election will largely
determine the future of presidential aspirants. If the MDP proves relatively successful, Rhee In Je, the party’s
chief campaign manager’s, will have secured his position as a conspicuous leader and advance a step further toward
being the MDP’s contender in the presidential election in December 2002. The GNP’s electoral showing is obviously
important in fortifying its leadership position and confirming Lee Hoi Chang’s nomination in the next presidential
election. As in the last presidential election, held in December 1997, Rhee and Lee have fallen into a zero-sum
contention. Rhee In Je is again helping Kim Dae Jung win against Lee Hoi Chang. Nevertheless, Rhee’s relationship
with President Kim may strain over time.
The constitution prohibits President Kim from serving another
term. As the next presidential election approaches, a struggle for succession will emerge within the MDP. Together
with Rhee, a few other presidential hopefuls will join the party’s nomination race. It remains to be seen who will
receive President Kim’s blessing.
Specialists
Marshall M. Bouton
Executive Vice President
Asia Society
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New York, NY 10021
Tel: 212-288-6400
Fax:212-517-8315
E-mail: Mbouton@asiasoc.org
Victor Cha
Assistant Professor
Government Department
Georgetown University
Washington, DC 20057-1040
Tel:202-687-2978
Fax:202-687-5858
E-mail: Chav@gunet.georgetown.edu
Nicholas Eberstadt
Visiting Scholar
American Enterprise Institute
1150 17th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Tel:202-862-5825
Fax:202-862-7177
E-mail: Eberstadt@aei.org
Ambassador Donald P. Gregg
President and Chairman
The Korea Society
950 3rd Avenue, 8th floor
New York, NY 10022
Tel:212-759-7525
Fax:212-759-7530
E-mail: Korea.ny@koreasociety.org
Professor Byung-Kook Kim
Department of Political Science
Korea University
1, Anam-Dong, Sungbuk-Ku
Seoul 136-701
Korea
Tel:822-920-1642
Fax:822-923-3013
E-mail: bkk@kuccnx.korea.ac.kr
Don Oberdorfer
Professor and Distinguished Journalist in Residence
School of Advanced and International Studies
Johns Hopkins University
1740 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Tel:202-663-5804
Fax:202-663-5891
E-mail: Doberdorfer@jhu.edu
Kongdan Oh
Oh & Hassig
7602 Boulder Street
Springfield, VA 22151
Tel:703-913-5472
Fax:703-913-5473
E-mail: Ohhassig@ix.netcom.com
Chan Wook Park
Department of Political Science
College of Social Sciences
Seoul National University
San 56-1 Shinrim-dong, Kwanak-ku
Seoul 151-742
Korea
Tel:822-880-6330 ext. 6331
Fax:822-887-4375
E-mail: chwpark@snu.ac.kr
Robert Scalapino
Robson Research Professor of Government Emeritus
Institute of East Asian Studies
2223 Fulton Street #2318
Berkeley, CA 94720-2318
Tel:510-643-5540
Fax:510-643-7062
David Steinberg
Director, Asian Studies
Georgetown University
ICC Building
Room 510
Washington, DC 20057-1040
Tel: 202-687-0251
Fax: 202-687-7397
E-mail: Steinbdi@gunet.georgetown.edu
Further Reading
Brady, David, and Jongryn Mo. "Electoral Systems and
Institutional Choice: A Case Study of the 1988 Korean Elections," Comparative
Political Studies 24 (1992): 405—29.
Cotton, James, ed. Politics
and Policy in the New Korean State: From Roh Tae-woo to Kim Young-sam
(New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1995).
Diamond, Larry, and Doh Chull Shin, eds. Institutional Reform and Democratic Consolidation in Korea (Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1999).
Kang, Won-Tak. "The Rise of a Third Party in South Korea:
The Unification National Party in the 1992 National Assembly Election," Electoral
Studies 17 (1988): 95—110.
Kim, Chong Lim, ed. Political
Participation in Korea: Democracy, Mobilization, and Stability
(Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio Books, 1980).
Kim, Hong Nack. "The 1988 Parliamentary Elections in
South Korea," Asian Survey 29 (1989): 481—95.
Kim, Ilpyong J., and Young Whan Kihl, eds. Political Change in South Korea
(New York: Paragon House, 1988).
Lee, Kap-Yun. "Democratization, Party Failure, and the
Emergence of the Unification National Party," Korea
and World Affairs 18 (1994): 749—71.
Lee, Man-woo. The
Odyssey of Korean Democracy: Korean Politics, 1987—1990
(New York: Praeger, 1990).
Lee, R. Jungja. "Democratization, Electoral Systems,
and Women’s Representation: A Comparative Study of Women’s Legislative Participation in South Korea and Taiwan,"
Pacific Focus
7 (1997): 67—89.
Leuthold, David A. "Further Steps Toward Democracy:
The 1996 National Assembly Elections," Korea
Observer 28 (1997): 1—24.
Park, Chan Wook. "Legislators and Their Constituents
in South Korea: The Patterns of District Representation," Asian
Survey 28 (1988): 109—65.
Park, Chan Wook. "The 1988 National Assembly Election
in South Korea: The Ruling Party’s Loss of Legislative Majority," Journal
of Northeast Asian Studies 7 (1988): 59—76.
Park, Chan Wook. "The Fourteenth National Assembly Election
in Korea: A Test for the Ruling Democratic Liberal Party," Korea
Journal 33 (1993): 5—16.
Park, Chan Wook. "Korean Voters’ Candidate Choice in
the 1992 Presidential Election: A Survey Data Analysis," Korea
and World Affairs 17 (1993): 432—58.
Steinberg, David I. "Korea: Triumph amid Turmoil,"
Journal of Democracy
9 (1998): 76—90.
About the Author
Chan Wook Park is a professor of political science at Seoul
National University. He chairs the Department of Political Science, SNU, and is a member of the Korean Presidential
Advisory Commission on Policy Planning. He has previously taught as an assistant professor at Franklin and Marshall
College, and also as a visiting professor at Duke University. His major research involves the comparative analysis
of legislatures, parties, and elections. He has published numerous articles in Korean and English on Korean party,
electoral, and legislative politics.
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