Yoon skips parliament’s opening ceremony


Breaking with tradition: Woo, as seen on the big screens, speaking during the opening ceremony of the 22nd National Assembly in Seoul. — AP

President Yoon Suk-yeol boycotted the formal opening of South Korea’s parliament, as his squabbles with the opposition deepen over allegations of wrongdoing by top officials and his wife.

It’s a tradition for South Korean presidents to deliver a speech at opening ceremonies for National Assembly sessions, and Yoon is the first to skip the event since the country’s transition from a military dictatorship to democracy in the late 1980s.

Yoon, a conservative who narrowly won election in 2022, has struggled to navigate a parliament controlled by liberals who have stymied his agenda and called for investigations into allegations of corruption and abuse of power involving his wife and government officials.

Yoon also faces declining approval ratings as concerns grow over his government’s ability to deal with a worsening job market, soaring household debt and a prolonged strike by thousands of doctors that is straining medical services.

Asked about his decision to skip yesterday’s opening ceremony, Yoon’s office said lawmakers must first “normalise the National Assembly, which overissues demands for special prosecutor investigations and impeachments”, before inviting Yoon.

Jo Seoung-lae, spokesperson of the main opposition Democratic Party, said Yoon’s refusal to attend the ceremony displayed his “arrogance” and disregard for the assembly’s role to check and balance the executive branch.

“It’s impossible to produce results in national governance without having respect for the National Assembly,” assembly Speaker Woo Won-shik said during the opening ceremony as he lamented Yoon’s absence.

Following parliamentary elections in April in which the liberals extended their majority, the current assembly began meeting in May. But its official opening ceremony was delayed for months because of political bickering.

Opposition lawmakers are pushing for an investigation by special prosecutors into allegations that top government and military officials tried to cover up the circumstances surrounding the death of a marine who drowned during a search for flood victims in 2023.

They want another independent investigation into allegations that Yoon’s wife, Kim Keon-hee, was involved in stock price manipulation and other wrongdoing. Yoon has denied the accusations. — AP

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