Hyung-A Kim
South korean political scientist
Hyung-A Kim is a South Korean Associate Professor of Korean Politics and History at the College of Asia and the Pacific at the Australian National University.
Quotes
edit- Despite China's visibly warm welcome to Park, there was no epoch-making agreement between Park and Xi, just as there was no fundamental change in China's North Korea policy. She attended the military parade mainly to show the change in her government's diplomatic approach, especially to expand [South] Korea's own diplomatic space by resisting US pressure to turn down the Chinese invitation.
- On Park Geun-hye's attendance to the 2015 China Victory Day Parade. As quoted in Park Geun-hye's diplomatic dance with Xi Jinping has heads spinning in Asia (September 10, 2015) by Kelsey Munro, The Sydney Morning Herald
- [It's] a big puzzle to many even among her supporters.
- On Park Geun-hye's attendance to the 2015 China Victory Day Parade. As quoted in Park Geun-hye's diplomatic dance with Xi Jinping has heads spinning in Asia (September 10, 2015) by Kelsey Munro, The Sydney Morning Herald
- Moon and his party have, so far, put more focus on the issue of unification or peace rather than denuclearization, to the extent of Moon being publicly seen as Kim Jong-un’s top spokesman.
- As quoted in South Korean peace efforts look 'out of sync' with elimination of North Korean nukes by Nyshka Chandran, 4 December 2018, CNBC
- Abuse of power has become the norm in Moon's South Korea, and Koreans are taking notice.
- Just four months after winning the April 15 general election by a landslide, and securing 176 seats in the 300-seat National Assembly, South Korean President Moon Jae-in and his governing Democratic Party (DP) are faced with an alarming change in public sentiment. [...] This drastic decline in public support for the president and the government illustrates not only the volatile nature of South Korea's democracy, but also the growing backlash against their attempts to make abuse of power the new norm in the country. Indeed, since their stunning election victory in April, President Moon and his party have repeatedly undermined the rule of law, ignored the procedures put in place to ensure the separation of powers, and made controversial moves to further their populist agenda and help their allies escape accountability.
- After winning the election with a margin unprecedented in South Korea's democratic history, which enabled it to dominate all 17 standing committees of Parliament, the DP transformed the National Assembly into its own law-passing agency. It rammed through numerous contentious laws, without subcommittee review or any other consultative procedure required under the National Assembly Act. The governing party also railroaded a series of housing laws in an attempt to stabilise skyrocketing real estate prices in the Seoul metropolitan area, where half of the country's population lives. The measures not only failed to bring the housing market under control, but also drew public anger, as they created more hurdles for middle-class first-time-buyers under the age of 40 - the main support group for the government. [...] The revelation caused many to question the sincerity of the government's pledge to resolve the housing crisis, and added weight to the accusations that President Moon and his party are using their dominance over the legislature to further their populist agenda and personal interests. Since the election, the DP government also made several moves to bring the Supreme Prosecutors' Office (SPO) fully under its control.
- The government's attempts to shield its members and supporters from being held accountable for alleged abuses of power are not limited to bringing the SPO under control either. President Moon and the DP's silence on and apparent unwillingness to get to the bottom of the sexual harassment allegations directed at powerful heads of local government, including the highly influential Seoul Mayor Park Won-soon, is yet another example of their desire to make abuse of power and impunity the new norm in South Korea. In light of all this, it is hardly surprising that Koreans are starting to turn their backs on Moon and his party who were elected on a promise to end corruption and abuse of power - ills that have beset Korean governments since the country's successful transition towards democracy in 1987. The alarming decline in the public's support for Moon and the DP is a clear warning that Moon risks becoming a lame duck in the fourth year of his five-year presidency and in the lead-up to the April 2021 by-elections and the 2022 presidential election.
See also
editExternal links
edit- Hyung-A Kim's profile at the Australian National University
- Hyung-A Kim at Academia.edu
- Hyung-A Kim at JSTOR
- Hyung-A Kim's articles at East Asia Forum
- Hyung-A Kim's articles at CNA
- Korean Skilled Workers: Toward a Labor Aristocracy. University of Washington Press. 2020. ISBN 978-0-295-74722-4.
- Korea's Development Under Park Chung Hee. Routledge. 2004. ISBN 978-1-134-34982-1.