A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, March 17, 2019
Political scandals hang over Moon’s rush to populist projects
The other equally controversial development is the greenlight his
administration has given to 23 state-led stimulus projects estimated to
cost around US$21.5 billion. The projects have not undergone any
feasibility studies.
This sudden announcement of fast-track spending has raised
pork-barrelling allegations among not only opposition parties and the
media, but also among Moon’s own supporters including the influential
Citizens Coalition of Economic Justice.
Why is Moon rushing into these populist projects, together with ten
other inter-Korea projects under his ‘New Economic Map for the Korean
Peninsula’ which alone will cost an estimated US$57 billion over the next twenty years?
This question needs to be raised not only because of the political
scandals hanging over Moon, but also because South Korea’s GDP growth is
slowing to a six-year
low. South Korea’s unemployment rate, in particular, hit an eight-year
high in August 2018. Unsurprisingly, Moon’s approval rating has fallen
to a record low of 48.4 per cent.
Crucially, Moon’s disapproval rating among men in their 20s has risen to 64.1 percent,
the highest across all age groups according to a Realmeter survey
conducted in December 2018. The young males who were once strong
supporters of Moon and the ruling Democratic Party have turned their
backs on his ‘people-centred economic policy’ which, contrary to his
repeated assurances, has made their livelihoods even poorer than before.
This is perhaps most evident in the country’s income inequality in the last fiscal quarter of 2018, which reached the worst levels since Statistics Korea began collecting data 16 years ago.
Nor is Moon’s political performance exhibiting brighter signs. Two mega-sized scandals are unfolding in a South Korean-style Days of Our Lives saga, exposing multiple allegations that could threaten both his presidency and the future of the Democratic Party.
The opposition Liberty Korea Party (LKP) revealed the first scandal in
December 2018 when it submitted a petition insisting that the Ministry
of Environment had created a blacklist of 24 public servants based on their conservative political leanings.
The LKP alleged that this list was the basis of a political purge. The
LKP also claimed that the President’s office, the Blue House, was behind
the purge and that members of Moon’s presidential election campaign had
been appointed to the newly vacated posts. Following weeks of
investigation, the prosecution banned former environmental minister Kim
Eun-Kyung from leaving the country.
Moon’s problem is that the scandal resembles the blacklist which
contributed to the impeachment of former president Park Guen-hye. Park’s
blacklist also led to the imprisonment of six former top aides, including her chief of staff and two ministers of culture.
Moon’s spokesman has reportedly demanded that the media refrain from
using the derogatory nomenclature of ‘blacklist’ in reference to the
current administration’s personnel policy. Still, the blacklist scandal
hangs over not only the moral conduct of Moon’s office, but is also the
real impetus behind his rush to populist projects: general elections are
about 15 months away.
The second and even more controversial political scandal involves Kim Kyoung-soo,
a sitting governor of South Gyeongsang province who was sentenced to
two years in jail on Jan 30 for an online opinion-rigging scheme
implemented ahead of the May 2017 presidential election in which Moon
rose to power.
Kim was found guilty of taking part ‘in manipulating the order of online comments under 80,000 different news articles’ which, said the presiding judge Sung Chang-ho, ‘damaged the proper generation of public opinion in the online sphere’.
Until recently, Kim was dubbed as the strongest candidate for succeeding
Moon. He is a former Democrat Party lawmaker and was the last secretary
of former president Roh Moo-hyun. He also assisted Moon during his 2012
and 2016 presidential campaigns as the latter’s public relations
manager. The court’s verdict on Kim’s jail sentence subsequently rocked
the Democratic Party, which has claimed that ‘the verdict [in]
immediately placing him behind bars violated the principles of the
country’s criminal laws’.
The Democrat Party’s president, Lee Hae-chan, has gone all out to save
Kim, forming a special committee that is threatening to impeach judges,
including the presiding judge Sung. Moon’s silence on this obvious
violation of the rule of law is generating public mistrust to the point
of risking his presidential credibility.
Moon’s legitimacy is based on the claimed mission of guarding that
democratic principle, since he is generally viewed as the offspring of
the ‘candlelight revolution’ which led to Park’s impeachment.
By addressing the Democratic Party’s undemocratic behaviour, Moon can
show the South Korean people that he is the fair and honest president he pledged to become in
his inauguration address. After all, Governor Kim’s online
opinion-rigging operations directly involved Moon’s own presidential
election campaign.
Moon also needs to clarify the ultimate aim behind his rush towards
populist projects if he genuinely wishes to create, in his own words, ‘a world without privileges and foul play’.
But under the present circumstances, it is hard to dismiss the conservatives’ allegations of pork barrelling.
The immediate and ultimate aim of Moon’s projects is also increasingly
clear: a sweeping victory in the 2020 parliamentary elections as a
foundation for the Democratic Party to retain power when the 2022
presidential election comes around.
By Hyung-A Kim, Associate Professor
of Korean Politics and History at School of Culture, History and
Language, College of Asia and the Pacific, The Australian National
University.
This article has been republished from East Asia Forum under a Creative Commons license.