There's a saying in New England: "If you don't like the weather,
just wait 10 minutes. It is sure to change." The same can be said
about South Korean politics. After Lee Myung-bak's landslide
presidential victory in December, the conservative Grand National
Party (GNP) seemed guaranteed to sweep next week's legislative
elections.
But a series of missteps by the Lee administration and bitter
infighting among conservatives have lowered expectations. The
degree to which this will hinder Lee in altering South Korean
policy and transforming its economy depends on how well the
conservative factions can work together after the election.
Lee has watched his popularity plummet by 20 points from a
post-election high of 70%. A public perception of an
arrogant and heavy-handed presidential transition team
overstepping its bounds was partly to blame. Even more damaging
were Lee's controversial cabinet minister nominees, several of whom
had to withdraw over corruption allegations. The nomination debacle
also had the unfortunate consequence of reminding voters of Lee's
own series of alleged scandals, an image that the progressives
sought to exploit.
Lee failed to heal the rift within the conservative movement after
he narrowly defeated former GNP chairwoman Park Geun-hye for the
party nomination. The hard-fought battle was to determine the
composition and future policy direction of the party as well as who
would be the GNP standard bearer. Park represented the traditional
conservative wing of the party, while Lee pushed a "pragmatic
conservatism" that appeared more centrist and appealing to a
broader swath of the electorate.
Lee's supporters were perceived as being rude, if not vindictive,
toward Park. Animosities over perceived slights were exacerbated by
a contentious battle over the selection of candidates for the
legislative election. The GNP did not choose 50 incumbent
lawmakers, 39% of its current 128 National Assembly members, as
candidates for next week's election. Park declared that the trust
between her and Lee "had been shattered" and accused Lee of a
vendetta by removing her supporters from the National Assembly. The
president's representatives pointed out that an equal number of
Lee's candidates were also removed from the final candidate
list.
The bitter feud confirmed that deep fault lines remain within the
party. Many incumbent National Assembly representatives who
supported Park either were not selected or resigned in protest over
how the nominations were handled. They are now running as a
"coalition of independents", tentatively named the "Pro-Park
Geun-hye faction".
Initial polls show these candidates will threaten GNP candidates
in North and South Gyeongsang provinces, the traditional party
stronghold. Several of these lawmakers have stated that, if they
win the election, they will return to the GNP but as an independent
faction. They have not defined how that would work.
Grinning like a Cheshire cat, conservative Lee Hoi-chang hopes to
capitalize on the GNP's misfortunes by recruiting defecting
legislators to his small Cheongchong province-based Liberty Forward
Party. Lee, twice a GNP presidential candidate, ran as an
independent candidate in the 2007 presidential race.
His party merged with the People First Party on February 12. Lee
is hoping to be the political heir to former prime minister Kim
Jong-pil who used a Cheongchong power base to create the third
largest political party at the time. Lee said his party's goal is
to obtain 50 seats, the same number as Kim Jong-pil's party once
held, though he is unlikely to do so.
The end result is that the conservative vote will be split among
three competing conservative factions.
Old progressive wine in new bottles
The progressive parties will benefit from the GNP's missteps
but remain hampered by their own factionalism and uncertain policy
message. The progressive opposition remains weak and in disarray
after losses in the presidential election and four previous
legislative by-elections.
The progressives remain a disparate collection of groups and
individuals unable to define, let alone rally behind, a common
vision or theme. The long-running battle between the liberal and
centrist wings continues. They remain undecided whether to battle
Lee Myung-bak for the policy center or advocate ultra-left policies
as an alternative.
Despite its foibles, the GNP still commands 46% public support to
the United Democratic Party's (UDP) 17%. In an attempt to gain
public favor through repackaging, the UDP replaced at least 30% of
its incumbent National Assembly members with new candidates. The
party said the ousted incumbents had performed poorly, been
convicted of crimes, or had low public support.
The move resonated to some degree with the electorate, but party
chairman Sohn Hak-kyu admitted, "Although the party is doing
better, we are still in perilous condition, like a patient who has
just been taken off his oxygen respirator."
The progressives have tried to increase their support by depicting
their cause as way to defend South Korean democracy, by balancing
power between the executive and legislative branches. This appeals
to the Korean concept of yeoso yadae (smaller ruling party,
bigger opposition party). The UDP has dramatized that "if the GNP
seizes enough seats to have power to change the constitution, it
could pose a threat to democracy as we would have a multiple-party
system in name only". The UDP hopes to win 100 seats, but this
remains doubtful.
As Seoul goes, so goes the nation
Political regionalism, referred to as Korea's "east-west
conflict", remains the dominant factor in South Korean politics,
despite efforts to reduce its significance. Political parties'
support relies largely on core regional constituencies: The
southwestern Jeolla provinces are traditional progressive
strongholds, and the southeastern Gyeongsan provinces are reliably
conservative.
However, to win nationwide elections, parties must reach beyond
these regions to gain sufficient support. The most critical swing
regions are the Seoul city district and the Gyeonggi and
Chungcheong provinces in the center of the country. Seoul and
Gyeonggi are perceived as transient regions with less pronounced
senses of regional identity due to the large influx of population
in recent decades. Voter loyalty is often determined by ancestral
home district.
In a high stakes gamble, the UDP is pitting its party leaders
against GNP favorites in two conservative strongholds in downtown
Seoul. Sohn Hak-kyu and Chung Dong-young, both failed 2007 UDP
presidential candidates, will battle heavyweight GNP National
Assembly members Park Jin and Chung Mong-joon - a 2002 presidential
candidate - in the high visibility Jongno and Dongjak districts of
Seoul.
Although Park Jin is running in his home district, the other three
eschewed easy re-election in their districts. Instead, they chose
to put their political lives on the line in hopes of raising their
stature as presidential candidates in five years. Jongno is the
symbolic center of South Korean politics and seen as a swing
district. As such, polls on both races will be closely watched as a
key indicator of any shifts in the electorate mood.
Ever-shifting political landscape
Early hopes for a GNP super majority of 200 seats, sufficient
to revise the constitution, are long gone. Now the party hopes to
gain a simple majority (150 of the 299 seats). Publicly, the party
has announced a goal of winning 167 seats, but privately it
expresses concern that it may fail to gain a simple majority.
Public support for the GNP has been falling during the past month.
An MBC poll found that 47% of respondents were disappointed by the
GNP's candidate selection process, while 57% approved of the UDP's
nomination process. A mid-March Chosun Ilbo poll of 17 electoral
districts in Seoul showed the GNP ahead in seven districts, the UDP
ahead in one, and eight districts too close to call. The growing
stature of the pro-Park alliance is more bad news for the
GNP.
Although the election will doubtless produce a net increase of
seats for the GNP and a net loss for the progressives, the change
from initial expectations will impact the relative strengths of the
parties. The progressives, foreseeing a forced exile in the
political wilderness after their drubbing in December, will be
reinvigorated to attack Lee Myung-bak and attempt to derail his
policies.
The conservatives, emboldened if not cocky after Lee's victory,
are now chastened and face serious challenges from within their own
house. Park Geun-hye has warned that "the GNP will have a hard time
staying united after the election is over".
Rather than produce an electoral affirmation of its principles,
the GNP will have to confront serious challenges after the
elections. Will the three conservative factions fight or work
together once the new legislators are seated? Can Lee Myung-bak woo
the defectors back to the GNP? What impact will it have on his
ability to implement sweeping economic and foreign policy
reforms?
Of greater consequence for South Korea, will the nation return to
the legislative gridlock seen during the Roh Moo-hyun
administration if the GNP underperforms in the election? Both
parties have had trouble connecting with the voters, in large part
because the campaign has been strikingly bereft of policy
debate.
In any case, President Lee will have to operate under greater
constraints than expected immediately after his landslide victory
in December. Moreover, the global economic downturn and rising oil
prices will make it more difficult for him to easily deliver on his
economic campaign promises. Pyongyang's expulsion of South Korean
officials in the Kaesong joint economic venture may mark the first
in a series of North Korean tests of the new president.
But balanced against these challenges will be significant
improvements in Seoul's relationships with the US and Japan,
allowing for greater policy integration and leverage over North
Korea. Most importantly, Lee has set South Korea on the right
policy path, undoing the damage wrought by five years of Roh's
administration. And as the old Korean adage goes, "A journey well
begun is half done."
Bruce Klingner is senior research fellow for Northeast
Asia in the Asian Studies Center at the Heritage Foundation
(heritage.org).
First appeared in Asia Times