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Pilkington writes about the election of Lee Jae-Myung as South Korean President, and analyses whether this will return political stability to the country after a turbulent few months.
The National Interest on MSN10h
Why North Korea Is Ignoring South Korea Again
South Korea’s new president seeks engagement with North Korea, but Pyongyang’s nuclear ambitions, ties with Russia, and ...
Data from the South Korean government and election watchdog shows the number of votes cast in a neighbourhood in a tightly ...
It has been a turbulent period for South Korean politics, triggered by then President Yoon Suk-yeol’s illegal declaration of ...
Political and social tensions in Bolivia are intensifying two months ahead of the general elections Aug. 17, raising concerns ...
Lee Jae-myung’s presidency may not herald a radical shift in the China-South Korea relationship, but it does create space for ...
South Korea's IGIS Asset Management plans to invest $1.3 billion to build two AI data centers in Busan, about 280 miles ...
FILE - South Korea's Democratic Party's presidential election candidate Lee Jae-myung, speaks during a presidential election campaign in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, May 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Lee ...
Lee Jae-myung, has an almost impossible agenda. He wants to be all things to all sides, domestically and internationally.
The South resumed the daily loudspeaker broadcasts in June last year in retaliation for North Korea flying trash-laden ...