Lee Seok-hyun (politician)

Lee Seok-hyun (Korean: 이석현; Hanja: 李錫玄; born 16 March 1951) is a South Korean politician previously served as Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly[1] and its six-term parliamentarian.

Lee Seok-hyun
이석현
Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly
In office
30 May 2014  29 May 2016
Serving with Jeong Kab-yoon
Preceded byPark Byeong-seug
Succeeded byPark Joo-sun
Member of the National Assembly
In office
30 May 2004  29 May 2020
ConstituencyGyeonggi Anyang Dongan-gu A
In office
30 May 1996  29 May 2000
ConstituencyGyeonggi Anyang Dongan-gu B
In office
29 May 1996  30 May 1992
ConstituencyGyeonggi Anyang B
Personal details
Born (1951-03-16) 16 March 1951
now-Iksan, South Korea
Political partyDemocratic
Alma materSeoul National University

Lee was first admitted to Seoul National University as its engineering student but quit to reapply to study law. During his studies, he actively participated in pro-democracy, student activism movement and produced and distributed its newspapers with Choi Gee-sung[2] but was never imprisoned. [3]

After finishing his studies, he started working for insurance company not preparing for bar exam - a typical route for law graduates - to avoid taking governmental roles under totalitarian regime of Park Chung-hee.[2] He then founded pro-democracy civil organisation with Moon Hee-sang funded by the eldest son of Kim Dae-jung in 1980.[4][2] With the martial law issued following the Seoul Spring, he tried to run away but was later captured and tortured by Defense Security Command.[3]

In 1985 upon return from the United States, Kim Dae-jung employed him as his personal secretary.[5] In 1988 he ran as a candidate of Kim's party but lost. In 1997 Lee, then-two term parliamentarian from Anyang, became the centre of politics when his business card which had his name in 7 languages marked nationality of his, South Korean, in a way used by North Koreans in Mandarin.[3] He subsequently resigned from his party and stayed in Mountain Gyeryongsan.[6] He returned to the party long after his party's victory in the 1997 South Korean presidential election.[7]

After losing the re-relection in 2000 to Shim Jae-chul, he was appointed as CEO of Korea Environment Corporation run by Ministry of Environment under President Kim Dae-jung from 2000 to 2003.[8]

After returning to the National Assembly in 2004, Lee was elected as the chair of its Health and Welfare Committee. He also took chairmanship of its special committees on reforming the National Pension Service twice in 2005 and 2011, State-owned enterprise in 2008 and Low birth rate-Aging society in 2008.

In 2014 he was elected as the Deputy Speaker of the Assembly. He is well known to the public for his chairing filibuster against controversial anti-terror bill at the plenary[9] - most notably when Cho Won-jin tried to interrupt Lee's party parliamentarian's speech.[10] In the 2020 election, he lost his primary and did not run for re-election.[11]

Lee holds LLB from Seoul National University.

Electoral history

Election Year Constituency Party Affiliation Votes Percentage of votes Results
13th National Assembly General Election 1988 Gyeonggi Anyang B Peace Democratic Party 18,990 21.76% Lost
14th National Assembly General Election 1992 Gyeonggi Anyang B Democratic Party (South Korea, 1991) 39,146 36.74% Won
15th National Assembly General Election 1996 Gyeonggi Anyang Dongan-gu B National Congress for New Politics 27,330 42.34% Won
16th National Assembly General Election 2000 Gyeonggi Anyang Dongan-gu Democratic Party (2000) 61,239 48.43% Lost
17th National Assembly General Election 2004 Gyeonggi Anyang Dongan-gu A Uri Party 41,913 51.56% Won
18th National Assembly General Election 2008 Gyeonggi Anyang Dongan-gu A Democratic Party (2008) 30,852 47.87% Won
19th National Assembly General Election 2012 Gyeonggi Anyang Dongan-gu A Democratic United Party 43,869 54.86% Won
20th National Assembly General Election 2016 Gyeonggi Anyang Dongan-gu A Democratic Party of Korea 45,680 50.06% Won

References

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