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'Strongman' Hong looks to halt conservative fall from grace

(China Daily) Updated: 2017-05-08 07:16

SEOUL - Opinion polls in the Republic of Korea suggest that the fall of Park Geun-hye, the country's ousted, jailed president now awaiting a corruption trial, has doomed conservatives in next week's presidential election.

However, an outspoken former governor, who touts himself as a "strongman", looks to win an upset in Tuesday's election and lift conservatives from free fall.

The emergence of Hong Joon-pyo, 62, who represents Park's Liberty Korea Party, is perhaps the most surprising development of the two-month race following Park's removal in March.

His rise shows that despite the street protests by millions that triggered Park's ouster, the ROK remains deeply split over its future, something that will likely hamper whoever becomes its next leader.

Hong, formerly the governor of South Gyeongsang province, has been trying to ride the public's growing fear over the Democratic People's Republic of Korea's nuclear weapons and missiles. He also says he can hold his own against other leaders in Washington, Tokyo and Beijing.

Hong calls for the United States to bring tactical nuclear weapons to the ROK after withdrawing such weapons in the 1990s, and also promises to create a marine special operations force capable of infiltrating the DPRK and removing its leadership in the event of war.

He talks about holding a summit with President Donald Trump on the USS Carl Vinson, an aircraft carrier the US recently sent to Korean waters in a show of force against the DPRK.

He also wants to revive death penalties for those convicted of heinous crimes, although the ROK hasn't executed anyone since 1997.

Recent polls have measured Hong's support in the mid-to-high teens, still far behind liberal front-runner Moon Jae-in, whose support is at 42.4 percent. But Hong has cut into the second-place status of centrist Ahn Cheol-soo, whose support was around 20 percent, a troubling sign for Ahn's hopes to absorb conservative voters disappointed with Park.

Hong's supporters see a rare conservative candidate who can appeal to low-income voters. They point to his straight-talking style and campaign promises to create jobs for young people and help poor families and the elderly.

His critics view him as an obnoxious throwback to an era where conservative politicians launched attacks on liberal rivals to win elections. Hong is also undergoing a trial over allegations that he received around 100 million won ($88,000) in bribes from a businessman who committed suicide in 2015.

Hong has called Moon a "DPRK sympathizing leftist" who is "trying to be friends" with the DPRK top leader Kim Jong Un. One of Hong's campaign offices recently uploaded on social media a ballot sheet where the names of Moon and Ahn were replaced with DPRK flags, prompting Ahn's office to file a complaint with the National Election Commission.

Associated Press

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