Guest post by Adrian Beaumont, who joins us from time to time to provide commentary on elections internationally. Adrian is a paid election analyst for The Conversation. His work for The Conversation can be found here, and his own website is here.
On Tuesday night, South Korean conservative president Yoon Suk Yeol declared martial law, a move that got international media coverage. Hours later, Yoon was forced to withdraw this declaration.
A two-thirds majority of parliament’s 300 seats was needed to impeach Yoon. The opposition centre-left Democrats and allies hold a 192-108 majority, so they needed eight MPs from Yoon’s People Power Party (PPP) to support impeachment. But PPP MPs boycotted Saturday’s vote, and it was declared invalid with only 195 MPs voting, short of the 200 needed to impeach. Impeachment required 200 votes, with abstentions effectively No votes.
If Yoon had been impeached, he would have been suspended and replaced by the PM, Han Duck-soo, a Yoon appointee. If six of the nine judges of South Korea’s highest court agreed with the impeachment or Yoon resigned, new presidential elections would be required within 60 days.
Yoon won the March 2022 presidential election by a 48.6-47.8 margin over the Democratic candidate, and his five-year term ends in 2027. Even before the current crisis, Yoon was very unpopular with over 70% disapproving of his performance. At April 2024 parliamentary elections, the PPP was thumped. A poll had 73.6% of South Koreans favouring impeachment.
French PM ousted after losing no-confidence vote
French President Emmanuel Macron called parliamentary elections for early July, three years before they were due. The left-wing New Popular Front (NFP) won 180 of the 677 seats, Macron’s centrist Ensemble 159, the far-right National Rally (RN) and allies 142 and the conservative Republicans 39. After the 2022 elections, Ensemble was easily the largest party with 245 seats, though well short of the 289 needed for a majority.
In September Macron appointed the conservative Michel Barnier PM. With the NFP hostile to him, Barnier depended on RN not supporting a no-confidence motion. Barnier used a French parliamentary procedure to force through an unpopular budget measure without a vote last Monday, so the only way to block this measure was by a no-confidence motion. The RN supported the NFP’s no-confidence motion. On Wednesday Barnier’s government was defeated by 331 votes to 244 after only three months. It was the first successful no-confidence motion since 1962.
Macron cannot call new parliamentary elections until July 2025. A centrist or conservative PM would be likely to suffer Barnier’s fate. Whoever Macron appoints as his new PM will need to be someone who can keep the support of either the NFP or RN. Either of these blocs combined with Ensemble would be enough for a governing majority.
Romanian court annuls presidential election
On November 24, a far-right and pro-Russia independent topped the first round of the Romanian presidential election with 22.9%, followed by a pro-EU candidate on 19.18%, a centre-left candidate on 19.15% and another right-wing candidate on 13.9%. The runoff was to be held today, but on Friday a Romanian court annulled the election owing to Russian influence, so the first round will need to be rerun.
Romanian parliamentary elections occurred on December 1. The 331 lower house MPs and 136 senators were elected by proportional representation in 43 multi-member electorates based on Romania’s counties with a 5% national threshold. After the fall of the previous government in September 2021, the centre-left PSD and conservative PNL had formed a grand coalition. At this election, the PSD and PNL lost their combined majority, with big gains for three right-wing to far-right parties. The PSD and PNL will need the cnetre to centre-right USR to form a majority.
Irish election results wrap
At the November 29 Irish election, there were 174 seats in 43 multi-member electorates that used the Hare-Clark system with three to five members per electorate. There were 14 more total seats than at the March 2020 election.
The conservative Fianna Fáil won 48 seats (up ten from 2020), the left-wing Sinn Féin 39 (up two), the conservative Fine Gael 38 (up three), the Social Democrats 11 (up five), Labour 11 (up five), the right-wing Independent Ireland four (new) and independents 16 (down three). The Greens were reduced to just one seat (down 11) after being part of the previous FF/FG government. FF and FG combined have 86 seats, only two short of a majority. |
Adrian Beaumont – Thanks as always. If you’d like to tell is what is really happening in Korea and Syria, please feel free. This world is moving really fast right now…. it’s hard to keep up.
And thank you to the Site moderator. I don’t know how he does it. So many cats to herd.
Thanks Adrian. You re the only source I have read to explain the South Korean rules on what happens next after their martial law crisis.