United New Democratic Party

United New Democratic Party
Founded 5 August 2007
Dissolved 17 February 2008
Preceded by Uri Party
Merged into United Democratic Party
Headquarters 15-16 Yeouido-dong, Yeongdeungpo-gu, Seoul, South Korea
Ideology Liberalism, environmentalism
International affiliation None
Colours Orange, Green (informally)
United New Democratic Party
Hangul 대통합민주신당
Hanja 大統合民主新黨
Revised Romanization Daetongham Minjusindang
McCune–Reischauer Taet'ongham Minjusintang

The United New Democratic Party (Hangul: 대통합민주신당, Hanja: 大統合民主新黨, Abbreviation: UNDP) was a political party of South Korea. It was formed out of the Uri Party and its resulting splinter groups. Chung Dong-young was the UNDP candidate in the South Korean presidential election, 2007; he lost to Lee Myung-bak. On February 17, 2008, the party merged with the Democratic Party to form the United Democratic Party.

Brief history

The party was formed when loyalists to president Roh Moo-hyun in the Uri Party chose to break ranks from other party members who showed lukewarm support for the administration. Some 80 out of 152 lawmakers of the Uri Party joined the new party, a conservative-liberal minority group from the Hannara Party (led by Son Hak-Gyu), and a group of progressive civil rights' group from outside South Korean politics also joined, seeking to complete political reforms.

As a result of merge with the Uri Party, this party has been ranked as the biggest political party in the legislative by 140 of 298 seats (as of January 14, 2008). After receiving a 'shocked' result at the 2007 presidential election, the delegates of its party decided to elect a new leader, with adopting a 'Papal conclave'-style system. On January 11, with more than a half delegates' vote, Son Hak-Gyu was elected to lead at the 2008 parliamentary election.[1]

Principles of policies

This party's platform emphasized these 4 key ideologies.[2]

Presidential election primary

Timeline

These list of key events has been managed by its public primary election committee(국민경선위원회).[3]

Rules

The official result of this primary combines all votes of these key methods. First-past-the-post and Electronic voting system is being used.

Method 1 and 2 grants exactly 90% of results (Method 3 grants 10%). The official candidate of this party will be nominated on October 14, just after the last regional rounds finishes. Due to the executives of this party's decision, All candidates did not contested during the Hangawi holidays and the 2007 Inter-Korean Summit periods.

Candidates

As of August 25, 2007, 9 politicians has been set up to their presidential bid.[4] Before starting their official primary to the South Korean public, they have to access the 'cut-off' process to reduce from 9 to 5.[5] Later, the number of candidates reduced to 3 after ex-Health and Welfare Minister Rhyu Si-min and former Prime Minister Han Myeong-sook quit the race.[6] Here's a list of official candidates of the UNDP primary that announced on September 5, 2007, 05:30GMT.[7]

Name Occupation Key Policies Notes
Son Hak-Gyu(손학규) Former governor of Gyeonggi-do Advanced economy, Integral society, Peace of Korean Peninsula led a conservative-liberal group from Hannara party
Chung Dong-young(정동영) Former Minister of Unification Continental and peaceful economy, '40 million middle-class' plan, Air-7 project Former chairperson of Uri Party
Lee Hae Chan(이해찬) Member for Gwanak-gu-eul Stable peace-footing of Korean Peninsula, Employment&Education21, Social integration, Matured democracy Former Prime Minister of the Republic of Korea(36th)

(Placed in order. Not considered its cut-off results. Based as of September 23, 2007)

Results

|Region Date Voters turnout Son Hak-gyu Chung Dong-young Lee Hae-chan Total
Ulsan and Jeju September 15 84,257 18.9% 4,089(26.1%) 5,265(33.6%) 3,414(21.8%) 15,658
Gangwon-do and North Chungcheong September 16 93,834 20.9% 5,279(26.9%) 8,645(44.0%) 5,511(28.1%) 19,626
Gwangju and South Jeolla September 29 246,518  22.63% 19,906(35.68%) 26,065(46.71%) 9,826(17.61%) 55,797 
Busan and South Gyeongsang September 30 209,518  14.61% 8,577(28.01%) 11,150(36.42%) 10,890(35.57%) 30,617 
Daejeon, South Chungcheong and North Jeolla October 14 9,467(16.12%) 42,026(71.56%) 7,236(12.32%) 58,729
Incheon and Gyeonggi October 14 16,747(41.88%) 16,142(40.37%) 7,098(17.75%) 39,987
Daegu and North Gyeongsang October 14 3,547(38.96%) 2,706(29.72%) 2,851(31.32%) 9,104
Seoul October 14 13,631(32.14%) 20,977(49.46%) 7,802(18.40%) 42,410
Mobile votes October 4–14 238,725 74.33% 70,031(39.46%) 62,138(35.02%) 45,284(25.52%) 177,453
Opinion polls October 8–14 - - 17,525(35.34%) 21,850(44.06%) 10,216(20.60%) 49,591
Total 1,969,156 25.18% 168,799(34.04%) 216,984(43.75%) 110,128(22.21%) 495,911

Source: The current status of the UNDP Primary, Seoprise.com, Retrieved on October 1, 2007.

Re-merge with Democratic Party

On February 17, 2008, the UNDP merged with the Democratic Party (민주당), forming the United Democratic Party (통합민주당). This was four years after the Uri Party (열린우리당)'s split from the Millennium Democratic Party (새천년민주당). [8]

Election results

Presidential elections

Election Candidate Total votes Share of votes Outcome Party Name
2007 Chung Dong-young 6,174,681 26.1% Lost Red X United New Democratic Party

See also

References

  1. Sohn Hak-kyu chosen to lead United New Democratic Party, the Hankyoreh, Retrieved on January 11, 2008
  2. Official Platform of the UNDP(Korean), the UNDP, Retrieved on August 7, 2007
  3. The process of UNDP primary, Public primary election committee of the UNDP, 2007
  4. Daily Briefing of the UNDP(Korean), Spokesperson of the UNDP, Retrieved on August 24, 2007
  5. The cut-off of UNDP Primary will reduce from 9 to 5(Korean), Yonhap, Retrieved on August 25, 2007
  6. Chung Dong-young Leads 3-Way Nomination Race
  7. Son Hak-gyu, Han Myeong-suk, Lee Hae-chan, Chung Dong-yong, Rhyu Si-min(Korean), Ohmynews, Retrieved on September 5, 2007
  8. 통합민주당 공식 출범, the Hankyoreh, Retrieved on March 5, 2008

External links

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