South Korean lawmakers backing Yoon’s impeachment face party backlash

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President Yoon Suk Yeol was impeached at the second attempt on Dec 14, with at least 12 lawmakers from the People Power Party supporting the motion.

President Yoon Suk Yeol was impeached at the second attempt on Dec 14, with at least 12 lawmakers from the People Power Party supporting the motion.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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SEOUL – Divisions within the People Power Party (PPP) deepened significantly following the vote to impeach South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, with senior lawmakers criticising party chair Han Dong-hoon and lawmakers who disobeyed the party line.

Representative Yoo Young-ha, who previously served as legal counsel for former president Park Geun-hye, criticised fellow party members who cast votes in favour of the impeachment motion.

“Heaven will take away your political lives,” he wrote on his Facebook account. “I assure you, your political careers are over.”

Mr Yeol was

impeached at the second attempt on Dec 14

, with at least 12 lawmakers from his People Power Party supporting the motion.

The vote occurred amid deepening divisions within the party, pitting the supporters of the party chair against Mr Yoon’s loyalists, who opposed impeachment. His supporters made up a majority of party lawmakers, who set a party line to vote against impeachment, warning that removing a second conservative leader could jeopardise the party’s unity and future.

In addition to representatives Ahn Cheol-soo and Kim Yea-ji, who had supported the first impeachment motion, five other PPP members — representatives Cho Kyung-tae, Kim Sang-wook, Kim Jae-sub, Jin Jong-oh and Han Ji-ah — publicly declared they would vote to impeach the President.

The result of Dec 14’s vote revealed that five more lawmakers had defied the party line. Their identities are unknown, as the vote was anonymous.

The vote also had three abstentions and eight invalid votes, which some observers say could be counted as ruling party votes also defying the party stance.

Supreme Council members loyal to Mr Han, along with other pro-Yoon lawmakers, have already offered to resign. This is expected to pave the way for the ruling party to transition into an emergency steering committee, with the pro-Yoon faction widely anticipated to take control.

Appearing at a TV interview after the vote, Representative Kim Sang-wook, who had held a one-man rally to convince fellow ruling party lawmakers to pass the motion, said: “I believed the President was unfit for the role, as he directly undermined constitutional order and liberal democracy – the core values of conservatism. I saw him as a traitor to conservative principles.”

Of the lawmakers who voted in favour, he said: “They showed incredible courage, fully accepting all the criticism and the possibility of losing everything – even facing condemnation so severe that they might have no place to stand. They made their decision with that resolve.” THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

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