City
Epaper

South Korea: Ex-PM Han declares presidential bid, pledges constitutional reforms

By IANS | Updated: May 2, 2025 13:12 IST

Seoul, May 2 Former South Korean Prime Minister Han Duck-soo declared his bid for President on Friday, vowing ...

Open in App

Seoul, May 2 Former South Korean Prime Minister Han Duck-soo declared his bid for President on Friday, vowing to cut short his term to three years in order to amend the Constitution and use his economic expertise to tackle the crisis in trade.

Han's announcement at the National Assembly came one month before voters head to the polls on June 3 to pick a successor to impeached former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol.

Even before entering the race, Han was a favourite among conservatives to challenge current frontrunner Lee Jae-myung, the presidential candidate of the liberal Democratic Party.

Until his resignation Thursday, Han served as Acting President and Prime Minister in the months following Yoon's short-lived imposition of martial law in December.

"I decided to find something I can do for the future of the Republic of Korea I love and for all of us," he said in a press conference at the Assembly. "I will do my utmost to be chosen by our people through the upcoming presidential election."

Han, who was Prime Minister under both liberal and conservative presidents and also served as the South Korean Ambassador to the United States, said he will make three promises to the people, including an immediate amendment to the Constitution.

The aim will be to craft an amendment proposal in his first year in office, finalise the amendment in the second year, hold general and presidential elections in the third year in line with the new Constitution, and then immediately step down.

The key goal in amending the Constitution, he said, will be "for the President and the National Assembly to share power amid checks and balances, eliminating the juridification of politics and the politicisation of the judiciary, and sincerely contributing to the national interest and public welfare through the institutionalisation of cooperative governance and effective administration."

The Constitution currently allows presidents to serve a single, five-year term, but under Han's proposal, he would only serve three years.

Han also pledged to resolve current trade issues triggered in part by Washington's new tariff policy by drawing on his experience leading multiple trade negotiations to success, Yonhap news agency reported.

He further promised to work for national unity and inclusion of the socially weak and marginalised.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

FootballYoung Tigresses acclimatised and raring to go against hosts Kyrgyz Republic in AFC U17 Women's Asian Cup Qualifiers opener

EntertainmentMeenakshi Seshadri urges safe Diwali celebrations, says light ‘lamps, candles’

InternationalTwo dead after plane crashes near Texas airfield

EntertainmentPriyanka Chopra is in awe of Delhi's lush-green ‘khoobsoorti’

BusinessNifty, Sensex open under pressure as Trump's new China tariffs trigger sell-off

International Realted Stories

International120 Indian Army troops reach Australia for Exercise AUSTRAHIND 2025

InternationalPortland Naked Protest: Why Hundreds of Nude Cyclists Blocked the Burnside Bridge?

InternationalI am good at solving wars: Trump says he will resolve Afghanistan-Pakistan conflict

InternationalPakistan on edge as crackdown on TLP intensifies; 170 detained, protesters allege "lethal weapons" used

InternationalPeace in Middle East harder than ending govt shutdown, says Trump