Democratic Party (South Korea, 2000)

The Democratic Party was a political party of South Korea, formerly called the Millennium Democratic Party (MDP; 새천년민주당; Saecheonnyeon Minjudang), it changed its name to the present form on May 6, 2005.

Democratic Party

민주당
PresidentKim Dae-jung (until 2002)
Founded20 January 2000
Dissolved27 June 2007
Merger ofNational Congress for New Politics and New People Party
Succeeded byUri Party and Democratic Party (2007)
Headquarters25-4, Yeouido-dong, Yeongdeungpo-gu, Seoul
IdeologyLiberalism (South Korea)
Social conservatism
Sunshine Policy
Political positionCentre
National affiliationAlliance of DJP (2000-2001)
ColoursGreen, yellow (informally)
Democratic Party
Hangul
민주당
Hanja
Revised RomanizationMinjudang
McCune–ReischauerMinjudang
Millennium Democratic Party
Hangul
새천년민주당
Hanja
Revised RomanizationSaecheonnyeon Minjudang
McCune–ReischauerSaech'ŏnnyŏn Minjudang

History

In 2000, the party officially founded, after it merged of National Congress for New Politics and New People Party led by Lee In-je and a number of conservative minded politicians joined it. In the 2000 Parliamentary election the party came second winning 115 seats.

Roh Moo-hyun was elected as president in 2002, but he subsequently left the party after he inaugurated as president and his supporters formed the Uri Party in 2003.

The MDP lost majority when Roh was impeached in March 2004 by the National Assembly for illegal electioneering and incompetence charges with support from the Grand National Party, losing 53 seats to a total of only 9 seats in the 2004 parliamentary election. Roh Moo-hyun was later re-instated by the Constitutional Court, and served as president until the end of his term.

By June 2007 Much of the party member joined the Uri Party while the New People faction form the new Democratic Party.

Presidential election primary

Candidates

This is a list of official pre-registered candidates that declared their 2007 presidential bid.

Name Occupation Results Notes
Cho Sun-hyeong(조순형) Member for Seongbuk-gu-eul led the impeachment of Roh Moo-hyun in 2004
Kim Min-seok(김민석) Former Assembly member Former Seoul mayoral candidate in 2002 local body election(when Lee Myung Bak was elected that position)
Lee In-je(이인제) Member for Nonsan, Geumsan and Gyeryung Presidential candidate of election 1997
Shin Guk-hwan(신국환) Member for Munkyeong and Yecheon Former Minister of Commerce, Industry and Energy of Roh's Administration
Jang Sang(장 상) Former leader of Democratic party Former president of Ewha Womans University

Election results

Presidential elections

Election Candidate Total votes Share of votes Outcome
2002 Roh Moo-hyun 12,014,277 48.9% Elected Y

Legislative elections

Election Total seats won Total votes Share of votes Outcome of election Status Election leader
2000
115 / 299
6,780,625 35.9% 36 seats; Plurality Governing Kim Dae-jung
2004
9 / 299
1,510,178 7.1% 53 seats; Minority Opposition Cho Soon-hyung

Local elections

Election Metropolitan mayor/Governor Provincial legislature Municipal mayor Municipal legislature
2002
4 / 16
143 / 682
44 / 227
2006
2 / 16
80 / 733
20 / 230
276 / 2,888

See also

References

  1. Kim Yeong-hwan announced not to run Archived 2008-01-04 at the Wayback Machine, Yonhap, Retrieved on August 31, 2007
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