
After months of unrest after depositing short war law, the South Koreans now elect their new president in large numbers, and all eyes are now on the liberal pioneer Lee Jae-myung, who entered the presidential race with stunning popularity.
Public opinion surveys and preferential surveys also preferred Lee Jae-myung, which showed him a commanding lead with the support of 51 % of the South Koreans.
Gallup Korea, according to their vote of opinion, showed that Lee Jae-myung keeps 49 % lead over its conservative opponent Kim Moon-Soo, who hits with 35 percent.
Lee Jun-Seok, the leader of the smaller conservative new reform parties, also hitchhikes in two with 11 percent.
Realmeter’s final survey reflected the trend and placed Lee at 49.2 % and Kim at 36.8 %.
But according to the new polls held last week, the popularity of Lee Jae-myung has disappeared because further public opinion surveys in Gallup Korea said Lee has held 45 percent support with its archive gap of 36 %.
Lee, however, still maintains comfortable leadership over Kim.
Pre-election surveys and polls suggest that Lee Jae-myung, who lost to Yoon Suk Yeol in 2022 in 2022, is now on the way to a decisive victory.
With regular presidential elections, the monthly transitional period occurs and the period of the new leader begins at midnight after the last day of the predecessor. Given that it is a snap election, the winner becomes president as soon as the National Election Commission ratifies the vote.
Snap elections followed the indictment and removal from the Yoon Suk YEOL, a conservative who briefly imposed martial law in December.
According to reports, the results of elections in South Korea would be announced until midnight.
The winner of Tuesday’s presidential elections in South Korea will enter the office a day later, arouse the usual two -month crossing to serve the whole, five -year term.
This is Lee’s third run for the Presidency. In 2022, he lost the elections to Yoon in the closet-sometimes recorded in South Korean presidential elections.
How did Lee Jae-Myuung lead the presidential race?
Lee Jae-myung, 60 years, a candidate of the Democratic Party, was the driving force of the opposition campaign for Os Yoon, whose marriage law ordered 3 December.
Lee said he initially thought Yoon’s late television announcement on the marital law was a digital deep performance when his wife told him about the news. After realizing it was real, Lee, then the chairman of the party, ordered all his legislators to throw themselves at the National Assembly to vote by the Yoon Regulation.
He then lived his movements in the assembly and urged the public to gather there to protest against Yoon’s action.
A sufficient number of legislators eventually got into the assembly to reverse Yoon’s decree, because it seemed that the soldiers he had deployed did not want to largely use the power to block access to the building.
Lee later led the Assembly to defend Yoon before the Constitutional Court formally excluded him in early April.
“The rebellion was dampened and Yoon Suk Yeol was released. A long, heavy winter went through and spring came again. People finally did it,” Lee said in a book published in mid -April.
“If you give me a chance to work as a president, I can clearly show how much change one official – responsible person can bring,” Lee said.
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