Unification National Party Explained

Unification National Party
Native Name:통일국민당 (Hangul)
統一國民黨 (Hanja)
Leader:Chung Ju-yung
Foundation:3 January, 1992
Dissolved:8 July, 1994
Merged:New Democratic Party
Ideology:Moderate conservatism
Position:Centre-right
Colours: Green
Flag:통일국민당 당기.svg
Country:South Korea

The Unification National Party (Korean: 통일국민당|Tongilgugmindang) was a political party which was founded in 1992 by Chung Ju-yung, founder of Hyundai Group.

History

The party was founded in January 1992 ahead of the 1992 legislative election in March, for which Chung announced his candidacy. The use of the word "unification" in the party's name reflects a common theme in earlier South Korean politics to consider Korean reunification an important issue, something which has become less common today.[1] Nonetheless, Chung and his party formed primarily in reaction to the government's strict attempts to regulate chaebol conglomerates and called for economic deregulation and liberalisation.[2] The party also criticised the nascent Gyeongbu high-speed railway as a government fundraising project for the upcoming election.[3] The party succeeded in winning 31 seats,[4] which was the main reason for the ruling Democratic Justice Party's loss of an outright majority.

In the 1992 presidential election held in December, the UNP ran on a primarily economic agenda, criticising both the Democratic Liberal Party (DLP) of Kim Young-sam for falling behind on economic growth as well as Kim Dae-jung for being too "radical."[5] It was speculated at the time that Chung would seek to primarily win over moderately conservative voters from the DLP, particularly the upper-middle class, but his performance was below expectations, obtaining only 16.1% of the popular vote and ending up in third place behind both Kims.[6] After the election defeat, many members of the UNP defected in favour of the ruling DLP.

Sometime after the election, Chung was subjected to financial investigations and, in February 1993, resigned from the National Assembly and left the party while these investigations were ongoing. Chung was eventually sentenced to three years in prison for violating the Election Act and the Aggravated Punishment of Specific Economic Crimes Act. He was found guilty of diverting $62.8 million from Hyundai Group to his political campaigns, although he was not jailed due to his age.[7]

In 1994, the New Political Reform Party merged with the Unification National Party in order to form the New Democratic Party.

Leadership

No.LeaderTenure
1Chung Ju-yung8 February 1992 ~ 10 February 1993
ActingPark Young-rok11 February 1993 ~ 19 February 1993
2Kim Dong-gil20 February 1993 ~ 24 February 1993

Electoral results

Legislature

Notes and References

  1. He. Baogang. 2001. The National Identity Problem and Democratization: Rustow's Theory of Sequence. Government and Opposition. 36. 1. 97–119. 10.1111/1477-7053.00055 . 44482930 . 154204433 . 0017-257X.
  2. Kim. In Chul. Kim. Mahn-Kee. Boyer. William W.. 1994. Privatization of South Korea's Public Enterprises. The Journal of Developing Areas. 28. 2. 157–166. 4192322 . 0022-037X.
  3. Nam. Chang-Hee. 1995. South Korea's Big Business Clientelism in Democratic Reform. Asian Survey. 35. 4. 357–366. 10.2307/2645800. 2645800 . 0004-4687.
  4. West. James M.. Yoon. Dae-kyu. 1992. The Constitutional Court of the Republic of Korea: Transforming the Jurisprudence of the Vortex?. The American Journal of Comparative Law. 40. 1 . 73–119. 10.2307/840686 . 840686 . JSTOR.
  5. Wade. Larry L.. Kang. Sung Jin. The Democratic Breakout in South Korea: An Informal Game-Theoretic Account . 1993. Asian Perspective. 17. 2. 39–70. 42704021 . 0258-9184.
  6. Kim. Hee-min. 1994. A Theory of Government-Driven Democratization: The Case of Korea. World Affairs. 156. 3. 130–140. 20672389 . 0043-8200.
  7. News: 1993-11-02. Hyundai Founder Sentenced For Violating Election Laws. en-US. The New York Times. 2021-10-31. 0362-4331.