SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea’s conservatives dropped their presidential candidate on Saturday and reopened a process to pick a new nominee as the country’s former prime minister joined the party to challenge a liberal frontrunner less than four weeks before the election.
The People Power Party (PPP) said its members decided to cancel the nomination of Kim Moon-soo as it plunged deeper into a bitter strife in trying to agree on a single candidate for a snap June 3 presidential vote.
Liberal Democratic Party candidate Lee Jae-myung has been a clear frontrunner to replace conservative former President Yoon Suk Yeol, who was removed from office in April for violating his duties by declaring a short-lived martial law in December.
Kim, who was selected as the candidate in a party convention a week ago, has resisted a push by the PPP to merge his campaign with former Prime Minister Han Duck-soo, saying he was the sole legitimate candidate chosen under a democratic process.
His bid to stop the party from reopening the nomination process was denied by a court on Friday, clearing the way for the conservatives to vote on the two choices this weekend.
Kim’s camp said the PPP’s decision to cancel his nomination was “against the Constitution, party charter and common sense of any human being.”
Han, the ex-prime minister who served as acting president after Yoon’s ouster, joined the race last week, saying his long public service made him the right choice to lead the country to tackle economic, trade and diplomatic challenges.
He joined the PPP on Saturday. The party hopes to finalise its new nominee before the national election commission’s formal registration for candidacy closes on Sunday.
The feud has overshadowed the conservative party’s already difficult battle to retain the presidency and policy debate has taken a back seat, while the liberal frontrunner began unveiling business policy proposals and national security initiatives on North Korea’s military threat.
Both Han and Kim trail DP’s Lee Jae-myung by a wide margin in opinion polls.
In two-way race scenarios, Lee has 44% support against Han with 34%, while Lee leads 43% against Kim’s 29%, according to a National Barometer Survey released on Thursday.
(Reporting by Joyce Lee and Ju-min Park, Writing by Jack Kim; Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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