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Conservatism in South Korea

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Conservatism in South Korea is a political and social philosophy under the influences from Korean culture, from Confucianism, as well as from the Western culture due to the intense Westernisation of the country. South Korean conservative parties largely believe in stances such as a developmental state, economic liberalism, strong national defence, anti-communism, pro-communitarianism, pro-Western and pro-United States, giving assistance to anti-communist North Korean defectors, supporting international sanctions and opposing human rights abuses in North Korea.

Starting from the dictatorship of Syngman Rhee, South Korean conservatism has been influenced from the military dictatorships of Park Chung-hee and Chun Doo-hwan. In domestic policy, South Korean conservatism has a strong elitist streak and promotes rapid modernisation and social stability. Since the mid-to-late 2010s, conservatives with right-wing populist tendencies have become more prominent in the public sphere. Hong Joon-pyo and Han Dong-hoon are notable examples of a right-wing populist in Korea.

Unlike conservatives in the Anglosphere, conservatives in South Korea often define themselves as liberals. Both groups fervently denounce anarchism, communism, socialism and liberalism and refer to themselves as anti-socialists. They are distinct from the general liberals in South Korea.

Values

Domestic issues

Conservatives are more likely to support upholding the National Security Act.

The anti-communist tendencies of South Korean conservatives has led to perceptions by progressives and liberals that conservatives fostering McCarthyist-like red scares among the public in order to score political points. This includes an incident before the 1996 Legislative elections, where conservative lawmakers were arrested for secretly meeting with North Korean agents in Beijing to seek North's help in manipulating the outcome of the election in exchange for payoffs. The North fired artillery into the Join Security Zone on the DMZ, which caused panic among South Korean electorates, benefiting the conservative party.

International issues

Conservatism in South Korea is fervently anti-communist. South Korean conservatives oppose warming relations with North Korea, and therefore wish to strengthen the US-ROK alliance in order to improve South Korean security, in contrast to South Korean progressives who prefer détente with North Korea through the Sunshine Policy along with either maintaining the US-ROK alliance or softening it as well as pursuing a hostile policy towards Japan. However, there is a split between moderates and hardliners among conservatives, with the former emphasizing humanitarian issues related to North Korean defectors and identifying themselves as liberals, while the latter, in possible addition to the former, takes up the traditional aggressive emphasis on anti-communism and pro-Americanism.

History

Before democratisation in 1987, South Korean conservatives were characterised not only by anti-communism, but also authoritarianism and developmentalism. After 1987, there was a trend in conservatism towards rebranding as the New Right and focusing on economic neoliberalism. In addition, conservatives adapted to the new democratic environment by increasing the number of conservative activist groups and online presence.

Following 1987, the South Korean public became less interested in issues such as class and politics than in the past, and thus, overall, both progressives and conservatives shifted their messaging; the former shifted from radical politics to supporting the likes of social democracy and welfare expansion, whereas the latter emphasised neoliberal values such as "freedom, capabilities, and competition of individuals".

The large city of Daegu, although a site of radical politics in the earlier postwar era, was transformed under the rule of Daegu-born Park Chung-hee and today has been called a "citadel of conservatism" in South Korea.

Following the success of Lee Myung-bak in the 2007 presidential election, some viewed it as a return to conservatism in South Korea after a decade of rule under progressive presidents, although an analysis by David C. Kang let him to argue that it was a turn towards centrism among the populace, given Lee's pragmatic business-minded tendencies, rather than traditional "arch-conservatism" of candidate Lee Hoi-chang. For instance, Lee pursued a more constructive and realistic foreign policy relationship with China in contrast to what more strident anti-communists would prefer, indicating the modern unpracticality of demonising China, even among conservative heads of state. During the campaigning seasons, Lee's aides also worked to present his approach as being "neither left nor right".

Jeong Tae-heon, a professor of Korean history at Korea University has expressed concerns that disputes over the term Jayuminjujuui () reflect a strong conservative bias reacting against North Korea's political ideologies, similar to political views seen in 1950. The term liberal democracy as used by South Korean conservatives has a different connotation than in the Anglosphere, as its reflects the anti-communism and state-guided economic develop of the pre-1987 era.

In 2020, People Power Party's leader Kim Chong-in apologized for the Gwangju Uprising. But some conservative citizen groups such as the Korean Council for Restoration National Identity and American and Korean Friendship National Council protested at UNESCO headquarters in Paris in May 2011 to prevent inscribing the records of the Gwangju Uprising in the Memory of the World Register, and to petition for "reconsidering identifying North Korean Special Forces as the perpetrators of the GDM.

Conservative parties

The political party that once were ruling party are in bold. KIP is the exception for being a ruling party during Provisional Governmental era.

Mainstream parties

  • National Alliance for the Rapid Realization of Korean Independence (1946–1958; Governing period: 1948–1950)
  • Korea Nationalist Party (1948–1958; Governing years: 1950–1954)
  • Liberal Party (1951–1970; Governing period: 1954–1960)
  • Democratic Republican Party (1963–1980) :* Korean National Party → New Democratic Republican Party (1980–1990)
  • Democratic Justice Party (1980–1990 also as governing period)
  • Democratic Liberal Party → New Korea Party (1990–1997) :* United Liberal Democrats (1992–2006)
  • Grand National Party → Saenuri Party → Liberty Korea Party (1997–2020; Governing period: 2007–2017) :* Liberty Forward Party → Advancement Unification Party (2006–2012) :* Pro-Park Coalition → Future Hope Alliance (2007–2012) :* Bareun Party (2016–2018) :* Bareunmirae Party (2018–2020) :* New Conservative Party (2020)
  • United Future Party → People Power Party (since 2020; Governing period: 2022–2025) :* Future Korea Party (satellite party for the 2020 election) :* People Future Party (satellite party for the 2024 election)

Minor parties

  • Korea Independence Party (1928–1970)
  • Korean National Youth Association (1946-1949)
  • Federation Korean National Independence (1947–1951)
  • Korea National Party (1947–1958)
  • Conservative Party (1963)
  • Righteous Citizens Party → Justice Party (1963–1967)
  • New People's Association → People's Party (1963–1971)
  • New Political Reform Party (1992)
  • United People's Party → Democratic Party (1992–1995)
  • Democratic Republican Party (1997–2009)
  • New Korea Party of Hope (2000–2001)
  • National Integration 21 (2004)
  • People First Party (2005–2008)
  • Pro-Park United (2006–2012)
  • Party of Future Union (2010–2012)
  • Go! Party for the Grand People (2011–2012)
  • Korea Vision Party (2012)
  • Hannara Party (2012–2016)
  • Chinbak Yeondae (since 2012)
  • Ghana Anti-Communist Korean Party (since 2012)
  • Republican Party (2014–2020)
  • Patriotic Party → United Korean Party → New National Participation Party (since 2015)
  • Korean National Party (2016–2020)
  • Pro-Ban Unification Party → Korea Economic Party → Free Korea 21 → Liberty and Democracy Party (since 2016)
  • Evergreen Korea Party (2017–2018)
  • Saenuri Party (since 2017)
  • New Korean Peninsula Party (since 2017)
  • Dawn of Liberty Party (since 2019)
  • People Party (2020–2022)
  • Liberty Party (2020–2024)
  • Our Republican Party (since 2020)
  • Pro-Park New Party (since 2020)
  • Future of Chungcheong Province Party (since 2020)
  • Freedom and Innovation Party (since 2025)

Conservative media in South Korea

The Chojoongdong media cartel wields the largest political influence in the South Korean political scene through newspaper and other print publications. The three media cartels have been criticized for fabricating stories against North Korea to support conservative rhetoric.

  • Chosun Ilbo – right-wing, anti-communist and conservative
    • TV Chosun (broadcasting)
  • Dong-a Ilbo – right-wing, conservative
    • Channel A (broadcasting)
  • JoongAng Ilbo – centre-right, moderate conservative and pro-Chaebol
    • Korea JoongAng Daily (English-language newspapers)
    • JTBC (broadcasting)
  • Korea Economic Daily – pro-business and conservative
  • Kukmin Ilbo – centrist, Christian values
  • Maeil Business Newspaper – pro-business
  • Munhwa Ilbo – right-wing, conservative and pro-Chaebol
  • Segye Ilbo - right-wing, pro-Unification Church

Conservative presidents

  • Rhee Syng-man (Liberal Party, 1948–1960)
  • Park Chung-hee (Military junta/Democratic Republican Party, 1962–1979)
  • Chun Doo-hwan (Military junta/Democratic Justice Party, 1980–1988)
  • Roh Tae-woo (Democratic Justice Party→Democratic Liberal Party, 1988–1993)
  • Kim Young-sam (Democratic Liberal Party→New Korea Party→Grand National Party, 1993–1998)
  • Lee Myung-bak (Grand National Party→Saenuri Party, 2008–2013)
  • Park Geun-hye (Saenuri Party→Liberty Korea Party, 2013–2017)
  • Yoon Suk-yeol (People Power Party, 2022–2025)

Major conservative parties election results of South Korea

ElectionCandidateTotal votesShare of votesOutcomeParty name194819521956March 1960August 1960196319671971197219781981198719921997200220072012201720222025
Rhee Syng-man180 (electoral vote)91.8%ElectedNARKKI
Kim Gu13 (electoral vote)6.7%DefeatedKorean Independence Party
Rhee Syng-man5,238,76974.6%ElectedLiberal Party
Rhee Syng-man5,046,43770.0%ElectedLiberal Party
Rhee Syng-man9,633,376100.0%ElectedLiberal Party
no candidatecolspan=4
Park Chung-hee4,702,64046.6%ElectedDemocratic Republican Party
Park Chung-hee5,688,66651.4%ElectedDemocratic Republican Party
Park Chung-hee6,342,82853.2%ElectedDemocratic Republican Party
Park Chung-hee2,357 (electoral vote)99.91ElectedDemocratic Republican Party
Park Chung-hee2,578 (electoral vote)99.96%ElectedDemocratic Republican Party
Chun Doo-hwan4,755 (electoral vote)90.2%ElectedDemocratic Justice Party
Roh Tae-woo8,282,73836.6%ElectedDemocratic Justice Party
Kim Jong-pil1,823,0678.1%DefeatedNew Democratic Republican Party
Kim Young-sam9,977,33242.0%ElectedDemocratic Liberal Party
Chung Ju-yung3,880,06716.3%DefeatedUnited People's Party
Lee Hoi-chang9,935,71838.7%DefeatedGrand National Party
Lee In-je4,925,59119.2%DefeatedNew National Party
Lee Hoi-chang11,443,29746.5%DefeatedGrand National Party
Lee Myung-bak11,492,38948.7%ElectedGrand National Party
Lee Hoi-chang3,559,96315.1%DefeatedIndependent
Park Geun-hye15,773,12851.6%ElectedSaenuri Party
Hong Jun-pyo7,852,84924.03%DefeatedLiberty Korea Party
Yoo Seung-min2,208,7716.76%DefeatedBareun Party
Cho Won-jin42,9490.13%DefeatedSaenuri Party
Lee Jae-oh9,1400.03%DefeatedEvergreen Korea Party
Oh Young-guk6,0400.02%DefeatedKorea Economic Party
Yoon Suk-yeol16,394,81548.56%ElectedPeople Power Party
Cho Won-jin25,9720.08%DefeatedOur Republican Party
Kim Gyeong-jae8,3170.02%DefeatedNew Liberal Democratic Union
Ok Un-ho4,9700.01%DefeatedSaenuri Party
Kim Moon-soo14,395,63941.15%DefeatedPeople Power Party
Lee Jun-seok2,917,5238.34%DefeatedReform Party

General elections

ElectionTotal seats wonTotal votesShare of votesOutcome of electionStatusElection leaderParty name1948195019541958196019631967197119731978198119851988199219962000200420082012201620202024
1,755,54326.1new 55 seats; Minorityin governmentRhee Syng-manNARRKI
677,1739.7new 24 seats; Minorityin governmentYun Chi-youngKorea Nationalist Party
473,1536.841 seats; Minorityin governmentRhee Syng-manNational Association
17,7450.3new 0 seats; Minorityin oppositionKorea Independence Party
2,756,06136.8new 114 seats; Majorityin governmentRhee Syng-manLiberal Party
192,1092.611 seats; Minorityin governmentNational Association
72,9231.021 seats; Minorityin governmentYun Chi-youngKorea Nationalist Party
3,607,09242.112 seats; Majorityin governmentRhee Syng-manLiberal Party
50,5680.63 seats; Minorityin governmentRhee Syng-manNational Association
249,9602.8124 seats; Minorityin oppositionRhee Syng-manLiberal Party
26,6490.3new 0 seats; Minorityin oppositionKorea Independence Party
3,112,98533.5%new 110 seats; Majorityin governmentPark Chung-heeDemocratic Republican Party
12.1%extra-parliamentaryin oppositionOthers
5,494,92250.6%19 seats; Majorityin governmentPark Chung-heeDemocratic Republican Party
8.8%extra-parliamentaryin oppositionOthers
5,460,58148.8%16 seats; Majorityin governmentPark Chung-heeDemocratic Republican Party
4,251,75438.7%40 seats; Majorityin governmentPark Chung-heeDemocratic Republican Party
4,695,99531.7%2 seats; Majorityin governmentPark Chung-heeDemocratic Republican Party
5,776,62435.6%new 151 seats; Majorityin governmentChun Doo-hwanDemocratic Justice Party
2,147,29313.2%new 15 seats; Minorityin oppositionKim Jong-cheolKorean National Party
7,040,81134.0%3 seats; Majorityin governmentChun Doo-hwanDemocratic Justice Party
1,828,7449.2%5 seats; Minorityin oppositionKim Jong-cheolKorean National Party
6,675,49434.0%23 seats; Minorityin governmentRoh Tae-wooDemocratic Justice Party
3,062,50615.6%new 35 seats; Minorityin opposition (1988-1990)Kim Jong-pilNew Democratic Republican Party
in government (1990-1993)
65,0320.3%20 seats; extra-parliamentaryin oppositionLee Man-supKorean National Party
7,923,71938.5%new 149 seats; Minorityin governmentRoh Tae-wooDemocratic Liberal Party
3,574,41917.4%new 31 seats; Minorityin oppositionChung Ju-yungUnited People's Party
6,783,73034.5%new 139 seats; Minorityin government (1996-1998)Kim Young-samNew Korea Party
in opposition (1998-2000)
3,178,47416.2%new 50 seats; Minorityin opposition (1996-1998)Kim Jong-pilUnited Liberal Democrats
in government (1998-2000)
7,365,35939.0%new 133 seats; Minorityin oppositionLee Hoi-changGrand National Party
1,859,3319.8%35 seats; Minorityin government (2000-2001)Kim Jong-pilUnited Liberal Democrats
in opposition (2001-2004)
695,4233.7%new 3 seats; Minorityin oppositionCho SoonDemocratic People's Party
77,4980.4%new 1 seats; Minorityin oppositionKim Yong-hwan
Heo Hwa-pyeongNew Korea Party of Hope
3,9500.0%new 0 seats; extra-parliamentaryin oppositionHeo Kyung-youngDemocratic Republican Party
7,613,66035.8%24 seats; Minorityin oppositionPark Geun-hyeGrand National Party
600,4622.8%6 seats; Minorityin oppositionKim Jong-pilUnited Liberal Democrats
0.68%extra-parliamentaryin oppositionOthers
6,421,65437.5%32 seats; Majorityin governmentKang Jae-seopGrand National Party
1,173,4636.8%new 18 seats; Minorityin governmentLee Hoi-changLiberty Forward Party
2,258,75013.2%new 14 seats; Minorityin governmentSuh Chung-wonPro-Park Coalition
9,130,65142.8%new 152 seats; Majorityin governmentPark Geun-hyeSaenuri Party
690,7543.2%13 seats; Minorityin governmentSim Dae-pyungLiberty Forward Party
2.66%extra-parliamentaryin oppositionOthers
7,960,27242.8%30 seats; Minorityin government (2016-2017)Kim Moo-sungSaenuri Party
in opposition (2017-2020)
0.69%extra-parliamentaryin oppositionOthers
11,915,277 (Constituency)
9,441,520 (Party-list PR)41.45% (Constituency)
33.84% (Party-list PR)8 seats; Minorityin oppositionHwang Kyo-ahnUnited Future Party (Constituency)
Future Korea Party (Party-list PR)
0.18% (FPTP)
2.06% (PR)extra-parliamentaryin oppositionOthers
13,179,769 (Constituency)
10,395,264 (Party-list PR)45.73% (Constituency)
36.67% (Party-list PR)5 seats; Minorityin governmentHan Dong-hoonPeople Power Party (Constituency)
People Future Party (Party-list PR)
195,147 (Constituency)
1,025,775 (Party-list PR)0.67% (Constituency)
3.62% (Party-list PR)5 seats; Minorityin oppositionLee Jun-seokReform Party
0.53% (FPTP)
0.81% (PR)extra-parliamentaryin oppositionOthers

Local elections

ElectionMetropolitan mayor/GovernorProvincial legislatureMunicipal mayorMunicipal legislatureParty name19951998200220062010201420182022
Democratic Liberal Party
United Liberal Democrats
Grand National Party
United Liberal Democrats
Grand National Party
United Liberal Democrats
Grand National Party
Grand National Party
Liberty Forward Party
Pro-Park Coalition
Saenuri Party
Liberty Korea Party
People Power Party

References

References

  1. Historical Criticism. link
  2. (19 April 2020). "한국 보수가 사랑한 '자유'···그들이 외친 '자유'는 따로 있었다 :자유주의란 무엇인가?". [[Joongang Ilbo]].
  3. (3 July 2018). "[박찬수 칼럼] '자유'와 민주주의, 리버럴". [[The Hankyoreh]].
  4. (8 July 2021). "윤석열이 22번 언급한 그 단어... 자유주의의 역습". [[OhmyNews]].
  5. (2011). "Social Networks and Ideological Orientation of South Korean NGOs Involved in the Unification Issues of the Korean Peninsula". Asian Survey.
  6. Kang, Hyun-kyung. (2 April 2012). "Is red scare right-wing conspiracy?". [[The Korea Times]].
  7. Jung, Jin-Heon. (2016). "The Religious-Political Aspirations of North Korean Migrants and Protestant Churches in Seoul". Journal of Korean Religions.
  8. (29 March 1998). "Korean Cloak-and-dagger Case Might Be Unparalleled in Scope – tribunedigital-chicagotribune".
  9. Chae, Haesook. (2010). "South Korean Attitudes toward the ROK—U.S. Alliance: Group Analysis". PS: Political Science and Politics.
  10. NAM, HWASOOK. (2013). "Progressives and Labor under Park Chung Hee: A Forgotten Alliance in 1960s South Korea". The Journal of Asian Studies.
  11. Kang, David C.. (2008). "South Korea's Not-So-Sharp Right Turn". Current History.
  12. Park. Jang-jun. (13 November 2011). [[Media Today]]. link
  13. (23 September 2020). [[The Dong-a Ilbo]]. link
  14. Bae. Myeong-jae. (11 May 2011). [[Kyunghyang Shinmun]]. link
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