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South Korea’s president denies wrongdoing in growing scandal

SEOUL (AP) – South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol denied wrongdoing yesterday in a burgeoning influence-peddling scandal involving him and his wife that’s severely hurting his approval ratings and providing political munitions to his rivals.

The political firestorm coincides with South Korea facing a slew of critical foreign policy issues.

The scandal centres around allegations that Yoon and First Lady Kim Keon-hee exerted inappropriate influence on the ruling People Power Party (PPP) to pick a certain candidate to run for a Parliamentary by-election in 2022 at the request of election broker and founder of a polling agency Myung Tae-kyun, who conducted free opinion surveys for Yoon before he became president.

For weeks, the scandal has been making headlines in South Korea as Myung’s leaked phone conversations show he boasted of his influence over the presidential couple and other top ruling party officials.

Asked about his ties with Myung during a press conference yesterday, Yoon said, “I didn’t do anything inappropriate and have nothing to hide regarding Myung Tae-kyun.”

Yoon said he has never meddled in any candidate nomination processes at the PPP, and had never asked Myung to carry out surveys for him, though he acknowledged that Myung gave him some sort of help during his presidential primary campaign in 2021.

It’s unclear whether Yoon’s statement will ease his festering political strife with his political opponents. The main liberal opposition Democratic Party has demanded he apologise sincerely, reshuffle top officials and accept an independent investigation on his wife.

The Democratic Party recently shared what it said was an audio file of phone calls between Yoon and Myung on May 9, 2022 – a day before Yoon took office for a single five-year term.

The opposition party alleges that the conversation proves Yoon provided Myung with political favours in return for free surveys. In the audio file, Yoon can be heard telling Myung that he asked a PPP committee to pick senior party member Kim Young-sun to run for one of the Parliamentary by-elections the following month. Kim Young-sun eventually obtained the party’s nomination and won the election.

In the file, Myung is heard saying, “I really won’t forget this favour for my entire life. Thank you!”

South Korea’s election law bars public servants, including the president, from meddling in elections, but has no related clauses on a president-elect, so it’s unclear whether Yoon violated the law.

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol during a news conference at the Presidential Office in Seoul, South Korea. PHOTO: AP
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