Progressive Party 진보당 | |
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Leader | Yoon Hee-suk |
Secretary-General | Song Yeong-joo |
Floor Leader | Yoon Jong-oh |
Co-leaders | See list
|
Chair of the Policy Planning Committee | Jung Tae-heung |
Founded | 15 October 2017 |
Merger of | |
Headquarters | 130 Sajik-ro, Jongno District, Seoul |
Ideology | |
Political position | Left-wing[A] |
National affiliation | Democratic Alliance of Korea |
Colors | |
Slogan | Always reliable at our side (Korean: 든든한 우리편) |
National Assembly | 3 / 300 |
Metropolitan Mayors and Governors | 0 / 17 |
Municipal Mayors | 1 / 226 |
Provincial and Metropolitan Councillors | 4 / 872 |
Municipal Councillors | 18 / 2,988 |
Website | |
jinboparty | |
^ A: 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 to the defunct Unified Progressive Party.[1][2] |
Progressive Party | |
Hangul | 진보당 |
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Hanja | 進步黨 |
Revised Romanization | Jinbodang |
McCune–Reischauer | Chinbodang |
Former name | |
Hangul | 민중당 |
Hanja | 民衆黨 |
Revised Romanization | Minjungdang |
McCune–Reischauer | Minjungdang |
This article is part of a series on |
Progressivism in South Korea |
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The Progressive Party (Korean: 진보당), known as the Minjung Party (Korean: 민중당, lit. People's Party) until June 2020,[3] is a left-wing[4][5][6] progressive and nationalist political party in South Korea.[7] The party was formed by the merger of the New People's Party and People's United Party on 15 October 2017.[8]
The party initially had two members in the National Assembly, both from Ulsan, but was reduced to one on 22 December 2017 when the supreme court convicted Yoon Jong-oe for breaking the campaign law.[9]
In July 2018, members of the Minjung Party met with members of the North Korean Social Democratic Party in China. The meeting was not authorized by the Ministry of Unification which could have punished the party for violations of South Korea's National Security Act. Jung Tae-heung, the co-chair of the Minjung Party, stated that he was warned the party may be fined for the meeting.[10]
In August 2019, the party held events related to nationwide protests against Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe and boycott against Japanese products.[11]
In January 2020, the Minjung Party surveyed at 1.5% approval rating ahead of parliamentary elections.[12]
The party lost its remaining seat in the 2020 legislative election.
The Minjung Party tried to participate in the Platform Party, a proportional party of the Democratic Party of Korea (DPK). However, the Democratic Party of Korea refused to join forces with the Minjung Party.[13]
In June 2020, the party renamed itself from the Minjung Party to the Progressive Party.
Some members of the Progressive Party were investigated for planning anti-American and anti-government activities by contacting North Korean spies and receiving orders from North Korea. The Progressive Party protested that it was a crackdown on progressive camps.[14] Some media outlets, such as the liberal Kyunghyang Shinmun, expressed concerns through editorials that the (right-wing Yoon Suk-yeol) government was pressuring labor unions and civic groups, as well as creating a public security state through counterintelligence investigations.[15]
In the by-election held on 5 April 2023, the Progressive Party secured one seat and became a parliamentary party. Kang Seong-hee was elected in Jeonju B district, which was the dominant area of the Democratic Party. The Democratic Party of Korea does not run candidates in by-elections if the Democratic politician was removed from office due to breaking the law. Former Jeonju B Parliamentarian, Lee Sang-jik, was arrested and removed from Parliament for bribing voters with cash handouts. The election was held as a six-way contest between a Progressive Party candidate, the conservative People Power Party and four independents, including two Democrats who ran as independents.
The Progressive Party's entry into Parliament drew intense criticism from right-wing conservative media. In particular, the Chosun Ilbo criticized in articles and editorials that some of the members of the Progressive Party were suspected of pro-North Korea espionage and that the party was the successor of the Unified Progressive Party.[16][17]
Meanwhile, media outlets with a liberal/progressive stance, such as Hankyoreh, gave a positive assessment. They suggested that the party's candidate would secure a seat, largely due to the Democratic Party of Korea employing 'color theory' tactics.[18]
In the 2024 legislative election, the party gained three seats.
Although the party has never officially claimed to be socialist or anti-capitalist, it is classified by some media outlets as being "far-left" (Korean: 극좌; Hanja: 極左)[1][2][19] or "radical left"[20][21] in the context of South Korean politics. The Progressive Party maintains "progressivism" as its official ideology rather than "socialism".[22][23]
The Progressive Party opposes restricting the labor of senior citizens over the age of 60. Their justification is that, because South Korea is not a European welfare state, there is a livelihood problem for the elderly.[7] Some socialists in South Korea consider it a liberal party, instead of a left-wing party.[24]
In regards to North Korea, the party adopts the ideology of minjokjuui (Korean: 민족주의; Hanja: 民族主義; lit. [Korean ethnic] nationalism). They support both immigrant rights and multiculturalism, employing a civic nationalist stance toward immigrants and naturalized citizens. They believe that minjokjuui is a non-racist ideology because it is "anti-imperialist" and that it can coexist with multiculturalism. According to them, kukkajuui (Korean: 국가주의; Hanja: 國家主義; lit. Statism or State-aligned nationalism), which is advocated by the conservative camp in South Korea, has historically been linked to pro-Japanese colonialism ("國家主義"), with pro-American colonialism being more prevalent today.[7]
The Progressive Party strongly supports direct democracy so that the Minjung could actively participate in politics.[7][25]
The party supports the redistribution of wealth and economically progressive positions such as imposing a 90% tax rate on more than 3 billion won[clarification needed] (roughly US$2,500,000).[2]
In addition, the party sees chaebol very negatively and sees "decomposing the monopoly economy of transnational capital and chaebols" (Korean: 초국적 자본 및 재벌의 독점경제를 해체) as its official party theory.[26][7]
The Progressive Party is an anti-imperialist party.[27][28] The party generally shows a strong left-wing nationalism tendency and is much more conciliatory to North Korea than mainstream left-liberals in South Korea, and the party argues that the remnants of colonialism from the Japanese imperialist era should be liquidated and unequal South Korea-U.S. relations should be dismantled to establish national sovereignty.[7][29]
The Progressive Party issued an anti-Japan joint statement with the Korean Social Democratic Party in 2019. The Progressive Party has the most resistant nationalist and anti-Japanese tendencies among South Korea's major political parties.[30]
The Progressive Party opposes supplying lethal aid to Ukraine in the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The Progressive Party accused the Yoon Suk-yeol government of engaging in diplomacy to antagonize Russia.[31]
They oppose all forms of sanctions against North Korea. The party's politicians say only the complete lifting of sanctions on North Korea brings peace on the Korean Peninsula.[32] In March 2022, suspicions arose that some party officials were operating in South Korea while receiving orders from North Korea, and an investigation was launched. The Progressive Party denied that they had ever received orders.[33]
The Progressive Party is known as an anti-American party, but they had stated they do not oppose everything related to the US and argue that what they call "반미" means "against American imperialism".
On 13 October 2017, when the founding ceremony of the Minjung Party was held, several left-wing American political figures such as Ramsey Clark and Noam Chomsky expressed their sympathy for the cause, especially with respect to attitudes regarding Korean reunification, and policy towards North Korea.[34] This party also contacted certain American politicians such as Jesse Jackson[35] and Bernie Sanders[36] in 2018 to draw support for the declaration of the end of the Korean War.
The Progressive Party has liaison support with the Green Party of the United States in policies concerning inter-Korean relations, for example the symbolic goal of a formal end to the Korean War.
Major politicians of the Progressive Party support a volunteer military system.[37] The party also supports women's rights, LGBT rights, youth politics and labor-oriented politics.[38][39] The party actively supports the feminist movement in South Korea.[40] Kim Jae-yeon said the reason for running for the 2022 Korean presidential election was "to become a feminist president".[41]
The Progressive Party is a Korean nationalist party, but it shows support for multiculturalism and immigration, aiming for "resistance nationalism'" instead of "right-wing nationalism". In addition, the Progressive Party opposes neoliberalism, believing it promotes discrimination against immigrants. However, regional parties of the Progressive Party have run campaign banners calling for the removal of "illegal migrant workers." The banners also included other phrases and wording that other progressive groups have called "anti-immigrant hate speech."[39][42][43][29]
The Progressive Party, along with human rights groups, accused the Moon Jae-in government's COVID-19 quarantine policy in March 2021 of being discriminatory against foreign workers.[44]
The merger of the New People's Party and People's United Party has been controversial, due to their status as parties that were largely a continuation of the Unified Progressive Party, which was dissolved and banned in 2014 due to purported pro-North Korean and "anti-constitutional" activity by a Constitutional Court ruling.[45][46] Conservative critics of the party argued that the Minjung Party is merely an attempt to reestablish the Unified Progressive Party.[47]
Politicians affiliated with the liberal Democratic Party of Korea criticize the Progressive Party for its anti-American activities, although both the Democratic Party of Korea and the Progressive Party support the Sunshine Policy, a dovish policy toward North Korea. Unlike the Progressive Party, the Democratic Party of Korea supports a foreign policy that is somewhat friendly to the United States.[18]
The Progressive Party has been criticized for taking a friendly stance toward North Korea. The centrist daily newspaper Hankook Ilbo called the Progressive Party 'pro-North Korea'.[48]
In the past, the Progressive Party, together with North Korea's political party, the Korean Social Democratic Party, issued a statement criticizing Japan. The right-wing newspaper The Chosun Ilbo published an editorial urging an explanation for allegations that the party's former leader was linked to a pro-North Korea spy.[49]
The Progressive Party is usually classified as far-left in South Korean media; however, the Progressive Party does not officially advocate general far-left ideologies such as anti-capitalism, communism or anarchism in the context of international politics. The Progressive Party supports the restoration of South Korea's sovereignty and full "independence" in the international community. The term "independence" here means strong support for hostile foreign policies against Japan, active reunification policy with North Korea, opposition to free trade with neighboring powers, protectionism, and establishment of completely equal diplomatic relations between countries.[7]
The most important reason for the PP's classification as far-left in South Korean politics is anti-Americanism. The PP believes that South Korea's socioeconomic contradictions are primarily due to the United States, rather than China or Japan, and hence supports the anti-American struggle. This is a significant departure from usual liberals such as DPK and JP, who are hostile to China/Japan but somewhat favorable to the United States to offset their China/Japan hegemony. The PP, in particular, advocates dissolving the alliance between the United States and South Korea.[50][51][52]
Democratic socialists in South Korea, including the Labor Party, criticize the Justice Party and Progressive Party as liberal, and being not progressive; however, due to the difference in diplomatic views between the two parties, the Labor Party is considered more moderate than the Progressive Party in the context of South Korean politics.[53] Some equate the Progressive Party's line with the Justice Party and the Labor Party's centre-left social democracy.[54]
Election | Candidate | Votes | % | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | Kim Jae-yeon | 37,366 | 0.11 | Not elected |
Election | Leader | Metropolitan mayor/Governor | Provincial legislature | Municipal mayor | Municipal legislature |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | Kim Jong-hoon Kim Chang-han |
0 / 17
|
0 / 824
|
0 / 226
|
11 / 2,927
|
2022 | Kim Jae-yeon | 0 / 17
|
3 / 824
|
1 / 226
|
17 / 2,927
|
Election | Leader | National Assembly | Metropolitan mayor/governors | Municipal mayor | Provincial/metropolitan councillors | Municipal councillors |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
April 2023 | Yoon Hee-suk | 1 / 1
|
— | 0 / 1
|
0 / 2
|
0 / 4
|
October 2023 | — | — | 0 / 1
|
— | — | |
April 2024 | — | — | 0 / 2
|
1 / 17
|
1 / 26
|
The left-wing Minjung Party criticized CJ Group's logistics arm for shifting its responsibility for the death to the subcontractor.
In the city's Gwanghwamun Square Friday, a group of about 30 protesters holding the banners of South Korea's left-wing Minjung party had gathered to demonstrate against the cancellation of summit.
Denouncing Park Sang-hak as "human scum," the booklet highlights opposition to his activities within South Korea, including among the left-wing Progressive Party.
... 극좌 성향의 진보정당으로서 정의당과 쌍벽을 이룰 정도로 뿌리가 튼튼한 데다 고정적인 지지층이 있어서 기호 2번은 당선 안정권에 속한다. ...[... Minjung Party is a far-left progressive party, and candidate No. 2 belongs to the stabilization of the election because the roots are strong enough to form a barrier with the Justice Party and there is a fixed support base. ...]
대선공약으로 주4일제 도입과 토지공개념 전면 실시, 1단계 연방통일공화국 진입 등을 내세웠어요. 급진적이라는 시선이 있어요.
김 후보는 2012년 통합진보당 비례대표로 19대 국회에 진출했으나 '통진당 해산'명령으로 의원직을 상실한 급진 좌파 정치인이다. 이후 민중당을 거쳐 지난해 6월 진보당 상임대표로 선출됐다.[Candidate Kim entered the 19th National Assembly in 2012 as a proportional representative of the United Progressive Party, but is a radical left politician who lost his seat due to an order to dissolve the Unified Progressive Party. Since then, he has been elected as a standing representative of the Progressive Party in June last year after passing through the Minjung Party.]
Members of the progressive Minjung Party hold a press conference in front of former President Chun Doo-hwan's home in Seoul on May 18, 2020.
"The dog barks, but the caravan moves on," Lee Eun-hae, a spokeswoman at the minor progressive Minjung Party, said in a statement about Mr. Trump and closer relations with North Korea.
... 그는 "최저임금부터 끌어올리겠다던 '소득주도성장'도 '재벌주도성장'으로 바뀐 지 오래이고 박근혜 정권만도 못한 최저임금 인상률과 무려 160조원을 재벌대기업에 쏟아 붓는 '한국판 뉴딜'이 오히려 'K양극화'를 부추기고 있다"며 "'노동존중 정부'의 약속도 '노조 탓하기 정부'로 변질됐다"고 비판했다. ...[... She said, "The 'income-led growth', which was intended to raise the minimum wage from the beginning, has long changed to 'chaebol-led growth'. The Park Geun-hye administration's minimum wage increase rate and the "Korean version of the (fake) New Deal", which pours as much as 160 trillion won into conglomerates, are rather encouraging (Economic) "polarization", he said, criticizing "the labor-respect government's promise has also turned into a "government to blame the union." Even the Democratic Party, which has survived on the basis of support for opposition to water polo forces, has become an vested group, he said. "The Democratic Party's government is not the subject of reform, but just the subject of reform." ...]
제국주의 망령에 사로잡힌 아베 정권을 규탄합니다. (The Abe administration is obsessed with the specter of imperialism.)
... 민중당은 조직 노동자, 비정규직 노동자들의 지지를 받으며 좌파민족주의적 입장에서 신자유주의를 비판하는 정당이다. ...[... Minjung Party is a political party that is supported by organizational and non-regular workers and criticizes neoliberalism from a left-wing nationalist standpoint. ...]
진보당 대선후보 "국민의힘-민주당, 경쟁적으로 이대남에 구걸"[Progressive Party presidential candidate said, "People Power Party and Democratic Party are competitively begging Angry Young Men".]
2. Neoliberalism and immigrant human rights.[2강 신자유주의와 이민자 인권]
더불어민주당 비례 위성정당인 더불어민주연합이 종북 성향이 강한 통합진보당(통진당) 세력의 국회 입성 길을 열어주고 있다는 비판이 제기된다. 반체제 활동으로 한 차례 해산됐던 세력에 대한 '민주당 숙주(宿主)' 논란이다.[Criticism is being raised that the Democratic Alliance for Democracy, a proportional satellite party of the Democratic Party of Korea, is paving the way for the United Progressive Party (Unified Progressive Party), which has strong pro-North Korea tendencies, to enter the National Assembly. This is a controversy over the ‘host of the Democratic Party’, a faction that was once disbanded due to anti-regime activities.]
정의당이나 진보당의 색깔은 우리와 같지 않다. ... 민주노동당에서 파생된 정의당과 진보당은 사회주의라는 용어를 다 뺐다. 진보를 포기한 거다.[The color of the Justice Party or the Progressive Party is not the same as ours. ... The Justice Party and the Progressive Party derived from the Democratic Labor Party do not use the term socialism. They are no different from giving up true progressivism.]
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