South Koreans turn out in record numbers for early voting in presidential election

South Koreans turn out in record numbers for early voting in presidential election
Lee Jae-myung, the presidential candidate for South Korea's Democratic Party, votes during early voting for the upcoming presidential election with his supporters at a polling station in Seoul, South Korea on May 29.
PHOTO: Reuters

SEOUL — South Koreans began turning out in record numbers for early voting on Thursday (May 29) in the country's snap presidential polls set to take place next week, election commission data showed, as both of the leading candidates cast their ballots.

The June 3 election comes after months of political turmoil and a power vacuum following the botched attempt by former leader Yoon Suk-yeol to impose martial law.

The liberal Democratic Party's candidate Lee Jae-myung, the frontrunner in the polls before a blackout period banning opinion polls began on Wednesday, cast his ballot in Seoul.

"In order to overcome the current crisis... and start again as a Korea of recovery and growth, please vote," Lee said after casting his ballot at a university district in the city.

His comment came after the Bank of Korea cut interest rates on Thursday and slashed its 2025 growth forecast for Asia's fourth-largest economy to 0.8 per cent from 1.5 per cent previously.

On Wednesday, Lee pledged to establish a new Ministry of Climate and Energy to "respond to the climate crisis", and expand and reorganise the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family to promote equal rights and deal with any reverse discrimination.

Some 3,107,164 people, or 7.00 per cent of total eligible voters, had voted as of around 11am (10am SGT), according to National Election Commission data, the highest turnout for the equivalent period in a presidential poll and compared with 5.38 per cent in the 2022 vote.

South Korea has 44.39 million eligible voters and early voting is allowed on Thursday and Friday.

The top three candidates based on the last published Gallup Korea poll before the blackout period put Lee at 49 per cent public support, followed by his main conservative rival Kim Moon-soo of the People Power Party with 35 per cent and another conservative candidate, the New Reform Party's Lee Jun-seok, on 11 per cent.

Kim Moon-soo, the presidential candidate for South Korea's conservative People Power Party, votes during early voting for the upcoming presidential election at a polling station in Incheon, South Korea on May 29.
PHOTO: Reuters

Kim and Lee Jun-seok also voted on Thursday.

Kim had eroded what was a more than 20 percentage point gap with Lee Jae-myung at the start of the campaign on May 12, but has failed to convince Lee Jun-seok to drop out and back him to improve his chances.

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Source: Reuters

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