South Korea’s Yoon Suk-yeol takes aim at police as he battles record low approval ratings
- Yoon Suk-yeol’s embattled administration has had to defend a proposal to assume greater control over law enforcement after it prompted police protests
- Officers say the move would compromise their neutrality and hearkens back to the days of dictators. A minister compared their protests to a ‘coup’
Yoon spent Tuesday defending his proposal to create a “police bureau” and assume greater control over the powerful law enforcement agency, a move that has prompted protests by senior officers.
As his interior minister attempted to walk back comments comparing the demonstration to a “military coup”, Yoon accused the officers of a lesser offence, saying they may have displayed a “serious breach” of discipline.
The dust-up with the police is just the latest controversy to consume Yoon’s administration since his narrow election victory in March.
The poll numbers, which have fallen more since then, have raised doubts about whether Yoon can recover. While he spends precious political capital over reforms, he is facing increasing public anger over inflation and runaway urban real estate prices.
“Yoon’s government is fighting needless battles as opposed to fighting some of the real problems of the country, such as the surges in the inflation rate and coronavirus cases,” said Lee Junhan, a political-science professor at the Incheon National University.