After the political upheaval of the months, his bated declaration of martial law began, the South Korea’s constitutional court on Friday snatched the President of the office, Yun Suk Yol, which led to new elections.
AFP takes a look at what will happen next:
What happens to this?
The decision of the Constitutional Court immediately strips all the powers and privileges – including their security details – and is bound to leave the President’s campus.
He loses executive immunity and faces a long, complex criminal trial on allegations of rebellion, with the time of jail time or even death sentence when he is found guilty.
While in the office, Yun checked several attempts by MPs to investigate his wife Kim Keen on a series of scams.
A lawyer and political commentator Yo Jung-Hoon said, “With this out of power, the prosecution has designed not only her but Kim to check well.”
When are the elections?
A presidential election should be held within 60 days.
According to local media, the first week of June is most likely, and the authorities will announce the exact date in the coming days.
Unlike a regular pole, where a two-month transition period in a presidential election, the winner will be inaugurated the next day.
For some time, Prime Minister Han Dak-Su and Sarkar has been running the government as acting president, a job that he started last week, after the Constitutional Court took out his own impeachment.
Who is the front-raner?
Opposition leader Lee J-Mung would “be likely to be the possibility of being the next president, Carl Fredhoff at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, echoing other experts, echoing other experts.
As head of the Democratic Party, Lee has a 34 percent support rating according to the latest Gallop Poll.
His party already controls the National Assembly. If Lee wins, his party “will be able to pursue and pass all reforms and laws”, said Friedhoff.
A former child factory worker, who faced an industrial accident and was out of school as a teenager, Lee made his career on his rugs-to-rich story.
He lost to the 2022 presidential election, but staged a political return as the Leader of the main opposition, despite the legal troubles, including the ongoing trials, caused a career.
Lee June-Han, a professor of politics at Incheon National University, said, but he gained fresh momentum last week when an appeal court overturned an election law against him, which said Lee June-Han said that Lee June-Han, a professor of a politics at Incheon National University, said Lee June-Han.
Is someone else running?
Labor Minister Kim Moon-Su.
While voting about nine percent, he leads a packet of Challengers of the People’s People’s Power Party, including former party chief Han Dong-Hoon.
Kim attracted public attention after Yun’s martial law debut, when he refused to bow down to the public to fail to stop the attempt of civil rule.
The gesture praised him as “revenue and strong” politicians from the conservatives.
73 -year -old Kim started his career as a leftist student worker and labor organizer during the South Korea’s ruling era.
But he has stated that “the collapse of the Soviet block and the pathetic realities of those regulations showed that inhuman and anti -social system was their system”, motivated them to join the conservatives.
What will happen next?
Despite his insults, “Yun was successful in raising a consistent political base, especially among far-flung groups,” G Yoong, a professor of political science at Michigan University, told AFP.
“This movement … is more structural and ideological,” he said, warning that this aspect of this legacy can exclude it.
In addition to fixing deep political partitions at home, the next President of South Korea will face challenges – from revival of a dull economy to joining the administration of US President Donald Trump.
GI-Wook Shin, a Sociology professor at Stanford University, said, “One of the most pressure issues will be how to maintain a strong alliance with the US and maintain the trilateral alliance with the US and Japan.”
Trump has also proved himself to be ready to increase Washington’s traditional approach to the atomic-head answer.
In his first term, he met North Korean leader Kim Jong Un for a high-profile summit, which eventually collapsed.
“Relationships with North Korea should not be ignored,” said Vladimir Tikhonov, a Korea, a Korea at Oslo University.
“For the newly elected South Korean President, navigating these complex diplomatic challenges would be the top priority.”
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