List of political parties in South Korea

This article lists political parties in South Korea.

South Korea has a weakly institutionalized multi-party system,[1][2] characterized by frequent changes in party arrangements. Political parties have a chance of gaining power alone.

Current parties

Parties represented in the National Assembly

Party Abbr. Leader Floor leader Ideology Political position Policy toward North National Assembly
Parliamentary group  
DPK Lee Jae-myung Park Hong-keun Liberalism (South Korean) Centre[3] to centre-left[4] Pro-Sunshine Policy
153 / 300
 
PPP Han Dong-hoon Yoon Jae-ok Conservatism (South Korean) Right-wing Anti-North
114 / 300
Without parliamentary group
JP Kim Jun-woo Sim Sang-jung Centre-left to left-wing[a] Moderate[b]
6 / 300
  • New Future
  • 새로운미래
  • 새로운未來
  • Saerounmirae
NFP Lee Nak-yon Kim Jong-min Centrist reformism N/A N/A
5 / 300
NRP Lee Jun-seok Yang Hyang-ja Conservatism[9] N/A
4 / 300
BIP Mun Mi-jeong Yong Hye-in Universal basic income Single-issue None
1 / 300
RKP Cho Kuk Hwang Un-ha Progressivism
Liberalism
Reformism
Centre-left Pro-Sunshine Policy[10]
1 / 300
LUP Jeon Kwang-hoon Hwangbo Seung-hee Christian conservatism[11]
Korean nationalism
Anti-communism
Anti-Islam
Far-right Anti-North
1 / 300
PP Yoon Hee-suk Kang Sung-hee Progressivism (South Korean) Left-wing[c] Strongly pro-Sunshine Policy[14]
1 / 300
  1. ^ The Justice Party is considered a solid 'left-wing' or 'progressive' in South Korea's political landscape.[5] However, some of researchers have evaluated the Justice Party as radical in South Korea's conservative political landscape, but still more moderate than the centre-left social democrats in Europe.[6]
  2. ^ JP does not support anti-communism and is moderate-open to dialogue with the North Korean government. However, unlike the DPK, which supports a friendly approach to North Korea.[sentence fragment][7][8]
  3. ^ The Progressive Party is often described as "far-left" in South Korea due to its sympathies toward North Korea, opposition to the U.S. military presence in South Korea, and political similarities with the defunct Unified Progressive Party.[12][13] This is due to the party descending from the Minjokhaebang-wing (National Liberation faction) of progressivism in South Korea, who were described as being left-wing nationalists, reunificationists and anti-American.

Extra-parliamentary parties

Conservative parties

  • Revolution Party (혁명21당)
  • Liberty Party (자유당)
  • Republican Party of South Korea (공화당)
  • Pro-Park New Party (친박신당)
  • Our Republican Party (우리공화당)
  • Dawn of Liberty (자유의새벽당)
  • Korean National Party (한국국민당)
  • Saenuri Party (2017) (새누리당)
  • Hannara Party (2014) (한나라당)
  • All Citizen's Participatory Party (가가국민참여신당)
  • Gana! The Anti-Communist Party of Korea (가나반공정당코리아)
  • The Christian Party (기독당)
  • Korean Independence Party (한국독립당)
  • Every House Public Election Grand Party (가가호호공명선거대한당)
  • Liberty Democratic Party (자유민주당)
  • New Korean Peninsula Party (신한반도당)
  • Korean People's Party (대한국민당) [15]
  • People's Grand United Party (국민대통합당)[16]
  • National Solidarity for National Unity (국민통합연대) [17]
  • Future Korean Peninsula Party (한반도미래당)
  • People's Future Party (국민의미래), A satellite party of the ruling People Power.

Centrist (or conservative liberal) parties

  • Hongik Party (홍익당)
  • Let's Go! Peace and Human Rights Party (가자!평화인권당)
  • Let's Go! Environmental Party (가자환경당)
  • Elders' Welfare Party (노인복지당)
  • Korean Wave Alliance Party (한류연합당)
  • Party for People's Livelihood (민생당)
  • People's Policy Party (국민정책당)

Liberal parties

  • Awakened Civic Solidarity Party (깨어있는시민연대당)
  • Republic of Korea Party (대한민국당)
  • K-Political Innovation Union Party (K정치혁신연합당)
  • Open Democratic Party (열린민주당), a recreation of the now-dissolved Open Democratic Party, which merged with the Democratic Party on 12 January 2022.
  • Korea's Farmer and Fisherman's Party (한국농어민당)
  • Pine Tree Party (소나무당)

Progressive parties

Single-issue parties

  • Women's Party (여성의당)
  • People's Democracy Party (민중민주당)
  • Small and Medium-sized Businesses and Self-employed Peoples' Party (중소자영업당)
  • Party for the Abolition of Special Privileges (가락특권폐지당), aimed at eliminating the special privilege of sitting lawmakers not being able to be tried for crimes while serving as lawmaker.
  • Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry Party

Unknown stances, third position, or syncretic parties

  • National Revolutionary Party (국가혁명당)
  • United Korean People's Party (통일한국당), Samgyun-ist party, where republican and nationalist political thought merge.[18]
  • Towards Tomorrow, Towards the Future (내일로미래로), an electoral alliance party

of 10 minor conservative parties. Formerly known as the Chungcheong's Future Party. (2020-2023)

  • Taegon Party (태건당), a pseudo-religious party created from the Dragon Empire religious cult. [citation needed]

Parties in formation

These parties are not legal acting political parties yet, but are in the process of gathering petition signatures to become formal political parties.

Party name Registration date Party leader Petitioning deadline Notes
Nuclear Nation Party
핵나라당
5 October 2023 Jeong Hui-won 5 April 2024 A Hitlerite party that has submitted its attempted registration for the 7th time[19]
The People's Judgement
국민의심판
3 November 2023 Kim Pil-gyu 3 May 2024
The People's Sentiment
민심동행
6 November 2023 Shin In-kyu 6 May 2024 Created from anti-Yoon conservatives.
Abolish Special Privileges Party
특권폐지당
4 December 2023 Jang Gi-pyo 4 June 2024 Single-issue party aimed at abolishing the law stating that lawmakers cannot be prosecuted while a sitting lawmaker unless approval from two-thirds of parliament.
Financial Reform Party
금융개혁당
17 January 2024 Shin Mi-sook 16 June 2024
Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry Party
대한상공인당
5 February 2024 Jeong Jae-hoon 5 August 2024 Represents the rights of small business owners , self-employed people , small and medium-sized enterprises , and merchants , as well as socially and policy-vulnerable groups such as youth , the disabled , and North Korean defectors.
Pine Tree Party
소나무당
13 Feb 2024 Song Young-gil 13 August 2024 A party created by former Democratic Party leader Song Young-gil.
K-Politics Alliance
K정치연합
14 February 2024 Ryu Jong-yeol 14 August 2024
Korean People's Peace Party
한민족평화당
16 February 2024 Do Cheon-soo 16 August 2024
Direct Democratic Local Self-Governing Party
직접민주지역자치당
27 February 2024 Im Hyeong-tae 27 August 2024 A unified national party of multiple regional parties, as the Constitution of the Republic of Korea does not allow for local or regionalist political parties.

Defunct parties

Timeline of all mainstream political parties

Conservative parties

Mainstream parties

Minor parties

Liberal parties

Mainstream parties

Minor parties

Progressive parties

Green parties

Unknown or syncretic parties

  • New Han People's Peninsula Peace Party (신한반도체제평화당), pan-Korean nationalism and Cheondoism, claims to support the unification of not only the Korean Peninsula, but of lands where Koreans are located in China, Russia, and Japan as well. Merged with Chungcheong's Future Party to create Towards Tomorrow, Towards the Future. (2021-2023)
  • Functional Self-Employment Party (직능자영업당), (single-issue) merged into Towards Tomorrow, Towards the Future. (2020-2024)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ an unregistered left-wing to far-left political party. It is unable to register due to a ban on openly socialist or communist parties under the National Security Act.

References

  1. ^ Wong, Joseph (2015). "South Korea's Weakly Institutionalized Party System". Party System Institutionalization in Asia: Democracies, Autocracies, and the Shadows of the Past. Cambridge University Press. pp. 260–279.
  2. ^ Wong, Joseph (2012). "Transitioning from a dominant party system to multi-party system: The case of South Korea". Friend or Foe? Dominant Party Systems in Southern Africa: Insights from the Developing World. United Nations University Press. pp. 68–84.
  3. ^ The Democratic Party of Korea is described as a centrist party by numerous sources:
    • "Democratic Party of Korea". Britannica.com. 3 January 2024. Democratic Party of Korea (DP), Korean Daeburo Minjudang, centrist-liberal political party in South Korea.
    • "Political Populism: Eroding Asia's Complex Interdependence? – Analysis". Eurasia Review. 1 November 2019. The South Korean President Moon Jae-in's centrist-liberal Democratic Party has also reflected and tactically deployed the considerable popular nationalist sentiment in South Korean society as he vowed in early August that in the escalating bilateral trade dispute the country would "never again lose to Japan".
    • "South Korea: Economic and Political Outline". Santander. July 2019. Retrieved 21 July 2019. The Minjoo Party: centre, socially liberal main opposition party, result of a 2014 merger between the Democratic Party and the New Political Vision Party, first party in the Parliament since August 2017
    • "The Justice Party and the South Korean Left: A movement with potential, but divided and struggling". Europe Elects. 14 November 2019. With most of national politics dominated by the centrist Democratic Party and the right-wing Liberty Korea Party (자유한국당), successor to the former governing Saenuri Party, there is little space for the Justice Party to find an opening for electoral success.
    • "Topic Brief - Academy Model United Nations" (PDF). ACADEMY MODEL UNITED NATIONS XXI.
    • Ahn, JH (19 September 2016). "South Korea split over whether to aid "arch-nemesis" in flood relief". NK News. Her party, Saenuri, has also remained silent on the issue, in sharp contrast to centrist Minjoo Party [sic], which on Monday urged Seoul to look beyond politics and help its neighbor.
    • Nomi Prins, ed. (2022). Permanent Distortion: How the Financial Markets Abandoned the Real Economy Forever. Hachette UK. ISBN 9781541789074.
  4. ^
    • "Moon Jae-in: South Korean liberal claims presidency". BBC. 9 May 2017. Retrieved 2 October 2019. Mr Moon, of the centre-left Democratic Party, unsuccessfully ran against Ms Park in 2012 elections.
    • "Seoul's mayor found dead in presumed suicide after #MeToo allegation". France 24. 7 September 2020. Retrieved 26 January 2023. A heavyweight figure in the ruling centre-left Democratic party, Park ran South Korea's sprawling capital -- home to almost a fifth of the national population -- for nearly a decade.
    • "S.Korea elects conservative outsider as president in tectonic shift". Reuters. 9 March 2022. Retrieved 26 January 2023. Official results showed Yoon, 61, edged out the ruling centre-left Democratic Party's Lee Jae-myung to replace Moon, whose single five-year term ends in May.
    • ""This is not the end": S. Korean activist ends 46-day hunger strike for anti-discrimination act". The Hankyoreh. 27 May 2022. Retrieved 3 February 2023. During the press conference, activists directed their most scathing indictments at the center-left Democratic Party, which despite holding the outright majority in the National Assembly (167 seats) has failed to actively push for the law's enactment.
  5. ^ "¹ý¾È Ç¥°á·Î º» ±¹È¸ÀÇ¿ø 300¸í À̳伺Çâ - ·¹ÀÌ´õP". m.raythep.com/. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  6. ^ 조성 (July 20, 2018). 독일 정치 우리의 대 (in Korean). e지식의 날개. ISBN 9788920032370 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ ""국민 생명이 먼저" 정의당, 북에도 할 말 하겠다는 '신노선'". The Hankyoreh. 28 September 2020. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  8. ^ "정의당도 요구한 對北 규탄결의안, 민주당 "北 이미 사과했다" 버티기". The Chosun Ilbo. 28 September 2020. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  9. ^ ""KIM OVERSEES MISSILE TEST"". KBS. 29 January 2024. Retrieved 2 February 2024.
  10. ^ "조국혁신당". www.xn--3e0b68h6spymf.kr. Retrieved 2024-03-09.
  11. ^ Yong Jae Kim (10 July 2023). "Conservative zealots: evangelical politics in South Korea". 9DashLine. Retrieved 31 March 2024.
  12. ^ "Female prosecutor opens up about sexual harassment". koreaherald. 30 January 2018. Retrieved 19 March 2020. "Members of the far-left minor opposition Minjung Party protest, demanding the Prosecution’s apology and an investigation into a female prosecutor’s sexual harassment allegations, in front of the Supreme Prosecutors’ Office in Seoul on Tuesday."
  13. ^ "[4·15 총선 앗싸①] '극좌'에서 '극우'까지 ... '배당금黨'에 '결혼당'도 출현" [[April 15 general elections] From 'far left' to 'far right' ... 'Dividend Party' and 'Marriage Party' have also emerged.]. 뉴스웍스. 26 January 2020.
  14. ^ "[보도자료] 김재연 후보, 유엔 총회 앞두고 "남북교류협력 가로막는 대북제재 해제하라"". Progressive Party.
  15. ^ "중앙당 등록공고(대한국민당)".
  16. ^ "국민대통합당". pgup.or.kr.
  17. ^ "공고 | 위원회소식 | 알림마당 | 중앙선거관리위원회".
  18. ^ "중앙당 등록공고(통일한국당)".
  19. ^ "공고 | 위원회소식 | 알림마당 | 중앙선거관리위원회".
  20. ^ "'새로운물결' 창당 선언한 김동연 "별칭은 '오징어당'…정치 바꾸겠다"". 조선비즈. October 24, 2021.
  21. ^ "국민의힘, 시대전환 흡수 합당…조정훈 합류로 112석".
  22. ^ Yonhap News Agency, December 19, 2014, [1], “...South Korea's Constitutional Court on Friday ordered the dissolution of a pro-North Korean minor opposition party...”
  23. ^ "'노동당·사회변혁노동자당' 통합정당 2월5일 출범 < 정당 < 정치ㆍ경제 < 기사본문 - 매일노동뉴스". 18 January 2022.

Bibliography

  • The present state of registered political parties[permanent dead link], National Election Commission of S. Korea.
  • The present state of political parties registration, National Election Commission of S. Korea, May 29, 2008.
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