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According to our forecast model based on this meta-analysis of polls, Lee is pulling in around 48.2% of support in a three-way race with Kim Moon-soo and Reform Party leader Lee Jun-seok as of May 13.
Following Kim Moon-soo’s drew the line on expelling Yoon from the party, former PPP leader Han Dong-hoon, who has repeatedly called for the party to break ties with Yoon and the former first ...
Kim Moon Soo, presidential candidate with the People Power Party, holds an election campaign rally in Seoul, South Korea, late Monday, June 2, 2025. (AP) ...
With 73% of ballots counted as of 1 a.m. Wednesday, Lee, the Democratic Party candidate, led with more than 48% of the votes, trailed by main conservative People Power Party candidate Kim Moon Soo ...
His main rival, Kim Moon-soo of the ruling conservative People Power Party, is projected to win 39.3% of the vote. Official results have yet to be announced.
Kim Moon-soo, the presidential candidate for South Korea's conservative People Power Party, gestures as he leaves an election campaign event ahead of the upcoming June 3 presidential election in ...
South Korean voters elected liberal Lee Jae-myung as president, defeating conservative Kim Moon-soo amid concerns over international relations with the U.S., China and North Korea.
The main conservative candidate, Kim Moon Soo, had 41.98%. The exit poll by South Korea's three major television stations — KBS, MBC and SBS — earlier showed Lee projected to obtain 51.7% of ...
Kim Moon-soo (C), the conservative People Power Party presidential candidate, said Tuesday while campaigning that he would not expel impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol from the party.
South Korea's liberal frontrunner for president, Lee Jae-myung, was leading his main conservative rival Kim Moon-soo by more than 10 percentage points in an opinion poll issued on Tuesday, though ...
Kim Moon-soo is his main rival and is attempting to keep the presidency in the hands of the People Power Party. The new leader will take office on Wednesday.
Yoon felt disappointed by Kim Moon-soo’s lack of contrition for remarks he made last year that the Jeju islanders involved in an uprising between 1947 and 1954 were part of a “Communist riot.” ...
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