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Encyclopedia > South Korean parliamentary election, 2004
Politics of South Korea

Legislative elections were held in the Republic of Korea (South Korea) on April 15, 2004. The newly formed Uri Party and other parties supporting President Roh Moo-hyun, who was impeached by the outgoing National Assembly, won a majority of seats.


In this, the 17th election for the National Assembly, voters elected 299 members of the legislature.

Contents

Results

Registered voters: 35,596,497
Votes cast: 21,351,340 (59.98%) voted.

Party Votes % Change Seats Change
Uri Party 8,145,824 38.3 - 152 +105
Grand National Party 7,613,660 35.8 -3.2 121 -24
Democrat Labour Party 2,773,769 13.0 - 10 +10
Millennium Democrat Party 1,510,178 7.1 -28.8 9 -53
United Liberal Democrats 600,462 2.8 -7.0 4 -6
Others 642,091 0.3 - 3 -6
Total 21,285,984 - - 299 -

Note: Changes in seats are the figures compared with the number of seats each party occupied as of 12 March 2004. In addition, the number of seats in the National Assembly has been increased from 273 to 299.


Parties

The newly formed Uri Party (Uri Dang or Our Party) gained support through its opposition to the impeachment of President Roh. It won 32 out of 49 seats in Seoul, 44 out of 62 in Incheon and Gyeonggi, confirming that a majority of voters supported the President.


The conservative Grand National Party, which supported the impeachment of Roh, suffered a loss of support, but won a majority in North Gyeongsang and South Gyeongsang regions and retained the 100 seats necessary to block constitutional changes.


The Democrat Labour Party won only 10 seats, but this was considered a great triumph considering that South Koreans are traditionally anti-communist and against left-wing policies.


The Millennium Democratic Party, formerly the major liberal party, was the second-largest party prior to the election but sustained the biggest loss in the backlash following its leading role in the impeachment of Roh, as much of its support shifted to the Uri Party.


The United Liberal Democrats, a regional party based on North Chungcheong and South Chungcheong regions, has lost support since its leader, Kim Jong-pil, did not contest the last presidential election.


Result by region

Region Uri Party GNP DLP MDP ULD Others Total
Seoul 32 16 - - - - 48
Busan 1 17 - - - - 18
Incheon 9 3 - - - - 12
Daegu - 12 - - - - 12
Gwangju 7 - - - - - 7
Daejeon 6 - - - - - 6
Ulsan 1 3 1 - - 1 6
Gangwon 2 6 - - - - 8
Gyeonggi 35 14 - - - - 49
South Gyeongsang 2 14 1 - - - 17
North Gyeongsang - 19 - - - 1 20
South Jeolla 7 - - 5 - 1 13
North Jeolla 11 - - - - - 11
South Chungcheong 5 1 - - 4 - 10
North Chungcheong 8 - - - - - 8
Jeju 3 - - - - - 3
Proportional
representation
23 21 8 4 - - 56
Total 152 121 10 9 4 3 299

See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Asia Society: Publications - The 1997 Korean Elections (17797 words)
In the agreement itself, despite the North's desires, the South was given a central role (along with the principal financial responsibility) in the proposed construction of a light water reactor in North Korea.
Although local elections may be more illustrative of the democratic process, for it is that level at which citizens are in intimate contact with their government and gauge its effectiveness, presidential elections command more attention because of the nature of Korean political culture.
The 1992 election, the financing of which has not yet been explained and which brought Kim Young Sam to power, was a fair election that saw the first return to true civilian control in over 30 years; it was not a military regime in mufti.
The Epoch Times :: Liberal Uri Party Takes Majority in South Korea's Parliamentary Elections (459 words)
South Korea's pro-government Uri Party campaign chief Kim Keun-Tae (R) shakes hands with another of his party's candidates after winning the parliamentary elections in Seoul, South Korea.
South Korea's Constitutional Court is widely expected to reject the impeachment, which came after the president was found to have violated an election law, and allow President Roh to return to office.
It appears that this election means that for the first time, a reformist, liberal president in South Korea will have the backing of a majority in the National Assembly.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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