Cho Bong-am explained

Honorific Prefix:The Right Honourable
Cho Bong-am
Native Name Lang:ko
Office:Member of the National Assembly
Term Start:31 May 1948
Term End:30 May 1954
Constituency:Incheon
Office1:Minister of Agriculture and Forestry
Term Start1:15 August 1948
Term End1:22 February 1949
Birth Date:25 September 1898
Birth Place:Incheon, Korean Empire
Death Place:Seodaemun Prison, Seoul, South Korea
Alma Mater:Communist University of the Toilers of the East
Party:Progressive
Hangul:조봉암
Hanja:曺奉岩
Rr:Jo Bongam
Mr:Cho Pongam

Cho Bong-am (25 September 1898 – 31 July 1959) was a South Korean independence activist and politician, who ran for president in the South Korean presidential election in 1956. He was a founding member of the Communist Party of Korea and the Progressive Party, a moderate socialist democratic party in South Korea which was one of the country's major political forces.[1]

In 1919, Cho Bong-am participated in March 1st Movement and was imprisoned for the duration of one year. Cho Bong-am studied in Japan and the Soviet Union. In the 1920s, he was active in the Korean Communist Party. After Japanese rule, Cho left the Communist Party in 1946, criticising it for its subservience to the Soviet Union.[2] After the end of the United States Army Military Government in Korea in 1947, Cho became the Minister of Agriculture under Syngman Rhee's presidency.[3]

In 1952, Cho ran for the presidency for the first time against sitting president Rhee, and Yi Si-yeong. He received only 0.8 million votes out of 5.2 million.

The left-liberal Progressive Party was founded in the aftermath of the Korean War under Cho's leadership. Cho and his followers were able to build a wide coalition with the country's leftist forces. Cho also successfully created coalitions with right-wing forces opposed to Syngman Rhee's dictatorship. The party's founding and moderate success in Korea's hostile political environment is considered a large result of Bong-am's personal charisma. The Progressive Party advocated peaceful unification with North Korea, through strengthening the country's democratic forces and winning in a unified Korean election. Cho called for both anti-communist and anti-authoritarian politics, as well as advocating for social welfare policies for the peasants and urban poor.

In the 1956 election, Cho ran against Rhee, the anti-communist strongman president. Cho lost with 30% of the vote, which exceeded expectations. Following the election, the Progressive Party broke apart due to factionalism.

Three years after the election, Cho was charged with espionage and receiving funds from North Korea. His first trial resulted in an acquittal but he was convicted in a second trial and was executed on 31 July 1959.[4] His death sentence was posthumously overturned in 2011 by the South Korean Supreme Court.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kim. Yunjong. The Failure of Socialism in South Korea: 1945-2007. 2016. Routledge. New York. 54,84.
  2. Book: Han. Sungjoo. The Failure of Democracy in South Korea. 1974. University of California Press. 79.
  3. Park. Sub. Cooperation between business associations and the government in the Korean cotton industry, 1950–70. Business History. November 2009. 51. 6. 850. 10.1080/00076790903266851. 154398645.
  4. Web site: Tragic end of communist-turned-politician Cho Bong-am. 9 January 2011.
  5. Web site: Cho Bong-am unjustly executed: Supreme Court. 20 January 2011 .