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South Korea's voters cast their ballots in a snap presidential election sparked by the impeachment of Yoon Suk Yeol.
After months of political turmoil, South Korea will elect a new president Tuesday to succeed conservative Yoon Suk Yeol, who was ousted over his brief but shocking imposition of martial law.
The snap election was held as South Korea faces an unpredictable ally in US President Donald Trump - and that will shape long ...
By Satyaki Chakraborty Lee Jae Myung of majority Liberal Democratic Party was sworn in as the new President of South Korea ...
Here’s what South Korea’s three leading presidential candidates say about tariffs and the U.S.-South Korea relationship under President Trump.
South Korea's Supreme Court ruled in May, before Lee was elected, that Lee had violated election law by publicly making ...
It has been a turbulent period for South Korean politics, triggered by then President Yoon Suk-yeol’s illegal declaration of ...
With a surging far-right, South Korea under Lee Jae-myung continues to confront the mainstreaming of extremism, erosion of moderate conservatism and a fractured progressive coalition.
South Korea's June presidential election ended six months of political uncertainty and policy paralysis in the country.
The election has got ugly ... has repeatedly questioned Kim's ties with Yoon. South Korea’s new president will have little time to negotiate with the United States before July 9, when Trump ...
Voters in South Korea are choosing a new president to replace Yoon Suk-yeol who was impeached and removed from office over his brief and ill-fated martial law bid in December. The snap election on ...