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Opinion | South Korea presidential election: can a new leader heal a fractured nation?
High levels of support for front runner Lee Jae-myung suggest a widespread desire to repudiate Yoon Suk-yeol’s martial law declaration
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Alexander M. Hyndin Melbourne, Australia
On Tuesday, South Koreans will head to the polls to choose the country’s new president. The election may draw to a close one of the most chaotic and contentious periods in the country’s post-1987 democratic era.
South Korea has been embroiled in a political crisis since December, when former president Yoon Suk-yeol disastrously declared martial law.
Yoon ordered security forces to block lawmakers from entering the National Assembly, leading to a dramatic late-night confrontation. His unconstitutional decree was overturned after just six hours.
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The fallout was equally dramatic: Yoon was impeached and removed from office in a drawn-out process that was not finally resolved until April.
This period coincided with massive street demonstrations both opposing and supporting Yoon, a far-right assault on a courthouse, and a physical stand-off between investigators and Yoon’s personal security team.
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The country, meanwhile, has cycled through three short-lived caretaker leaders.
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