South Korea Democratic Labor Party

The Democratic Labor Party (Korean: 민주노동당; Hanja: 民主勞動黨; RR: Minjunodongdang; MR: Minjunodongtang) was a progressive and nationalist political party in South Korea.

It was founded in January 2000, in the effort to create a political wing for the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions and was considered more left-wing and more independent of the two union federations in South Korea. Its party president was Kwon Young-gil, Kang Gi-gap, and Lee Jung-hee. In December 2011, the party merged into the Unified Progressive Party.

Democratic Labor Party
민주노동당
民主勞動黨
LeaderKwon Young-ghil
Assembly leaderGang Gi-gap
Founded30 January 2000 (2000-01-30)
Dissolved5 December 2011
Succeeded byUnified Progressive Party
HeadquartersJongdo Building, 25-1 Mullaedong2-ga, Yeongdeungpo-gu, Seoul
Ideology
Political positionLeft-wing
ColoursOrange
Democratic Labor Party
Hangul
민주노동당
Hanja
Revised RomanizationMinjunodongdang
McCune–ReischauerMinjunodongtang

In the South Korean political history, DLP is considered as the ancestor of all of modern day left-leaning political parties such as Justice Party and Progressive Party.

History

The party gained 10 seats in the National Assembly for the first time in the 2004 parliamentary election, making it the first major left-wing party to enter the Assembly.

Before and during the 2007 presidential election, conflicts arose between the two main factions within the party. The "equality" or the "left" faction, represented by the People's Democracy group, stressed issues ranging from social welfare, civil liberties, and labor rights, and took an antagonistic position against ruling liberal Roh Moo-hyun government.

Against them, the "autonomy" faction, represented by the National Liberation group, emphasized anti-imperialist struggle and viewed Korean reunification to be a paramount goal. In contrast to the "left" faction, "autonomy" faction advocated "democratic coalition government" (민주연립정부) with the ruling Uri Party, and took a reconciliatory position towards Roh government.

After the 2007 presidential election, the People's Democracy faction quit the party and formed the New Progressive Party (NPP). Despite the split, DLP gained 5 seats in the National Assembly in the 2008 election, but NPP gained none. In the 2009 by-election, NPP got one seat. On 5 December 2011, the party merged with the People's Participation Party and a faction of the NPP to found the Unified Progressive Party by Lee jung-hwee.

Political position

The Democratic Labor Party was originally considered as a democratic socialist party, including some left-wing nationalist ideologies. The party strongly opposed two-party system in South Korea, and represented the broad left-wing tendencies against the major liberal and conservative parties.

In 2008, the socialist-leaning Minjungminju-wing (Korean민중민주파; lit. People's Democracy-faction, PD) left the party after the ideological dispute about North Korea and established the New Progressive Party. After the party split, remained nationalist-leaning Minjokhaebang-wing (Korean민족해방파; lit. National Liberation-faction, NL) tried to make a partnership with major liberal Democratic Party. From the 2010 local elections, the party joined an electoral coalition with the Democratic Party.

In June 2011, the Democratic Labor Party removed "socialism" from the party code and replaced the phrase "socialism" (사회주의) with "progressive democracy" (진보적 민주주의), a liberal ideology.

Election results

President

Election Candidate Votes % Result
2002 Kwon Young-ghil 957,148 3.9 Not elected
2007 712,121 3.02

Legislature

Election Leader Constituency Party list Seats Position Status
Votes % Seats +/- Votes % Seats +/- No. +/–
2000 Kwon Young-ghil 223,261 1.18
0 / 227
new
0 / 46
new
0 / 273
new 5th Extra-parliamentary
2004 920,229 4.31
2 / 243
South Korea Democratic Labor Party  2 2,774,061 13.03
8 / 56
South Korea Democratic Labor Party  10
10 / 299
South Korea Democratic Labor Party  10 3rd Opposition
2008 Chon Young-sae 583,665 3.39
2 / 245
South Korea Democratic Labor Party  973,445 5.68
3 / 54
South Korea Democratic Labor Party  5
5 / 299
South Korea Democratic Labor Party  10 5th

Local

Election Leader Metropolitan mayor/Governor Provincial legislature Municipal mayor Municipal legislature
2002 Kwon Young-ghil
0 / 16
11 / 682
2 / 232
2006 Moon Sung-hyeon
0 / 16
15 / 733
0 / 230
66 / 2,888
2010 Kang Gi-gap
0 / 16
24 / 761
3 / 228
115 / 2,888

See also

References

Tags:

South Korea Democratic Labor Party HistorySouth Korea Democratic Labor Party Political positionSouth Korea Democratic Labor Party Election resultsSouth Korea Democratic Labor PartyHanjaKorean Confederation of Trade UnionsKorean languageKorean nationalismLee Jung-heeMcCune–ReischauerProgressivism in South KoreaRevised Romanization of KoreanSouth KoreaUnified Progressive Party

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