SEOUL, Oct. 6 (Korea Bizwire) – The opposition-controlled National Assembly rejectedSupreme Court Chief Justice nominee Lee Gyun-ryong on Friday, marking the first such rejection in 35 years.
Lee’s nomination was voted down in a 118-175 vote with two abstentions, shortly after the main opposition Democratic Party (DP), which has a controlling majority in the Assembly, made it a party policy to reject the nomination.
The DP has strongly opposed Lee, a judge at the Seoul High Court, citing several allegations and his alleged personal connections with President Yoon Suk Yeol.
It marks the first such rejection since 1988, when the nomination of Chung Ki-seung was voted down.
This also marks the first time that the Supreme Court is led by an acting chief justice since 1993, when then Chief Justice Kim Deok-ju resigned over a real estate speculation scandal.
It would take at least about a month for Yoon to name a new nominee.
After serving as a judge for about 30 years, Lee was nominated for the top court chief in August to replace Kim Meong-su, whose six-year term ended last month.
The ruling People Power Party has argued that Lee is fit for the job and is the right person to normalize what it claims is the politicization of the judiciary during Kim’s tenure, citing Kim’s progressive tendencies.
But the DP has also taken issue with Lee’s past rulings, where he reportedly reduced the sentences of offenders of sexual crimes or domestic violence multiple times.
Additionally, Lee also faces accusations of purposefully underreporting assets he and his family owned for many years in the annual asset disclosure of high-ranking government officials while he served as a high court judge.
In a message sent to reporters Thursday, Lee asked for the confirmation of his nomination and requested an opportunity, expressing concern that the Supreme Court’s en banc hearings and rulings will be virtually impossible in case of a leadership vacuum.
(Yonhap)