List of political parties in South Korea

This article lists political parties in South Korea. South Korea has a weakly institutionalized multi-party system,[1][2] characterized by frequent changes in party arrangements. Political parties have a chance of gaining power alone.

Current parties

Main parties

Party Assembly
seats
Party leader Floor leader Position Ideology
Parliamentary group   Democratic Party
더불어민주당
176 Lee Hae-chan Kim Tae-nyeon Centre[3] to centre-left[4] Liberalism[5]
Social liberalism[6]
  United Future Party
미래통합당
103 Kim Chong-in Joo Ho-young Right-wing[7] Conservatism
Social conservatism
Non-Parliamentary group Justice Party
정의당
6 Sim Sang-jung Bae Jin-gyo Centre-left[8] Social democracy
Progressivism
People Party
국민의당
3 Ahn Cheol-soo Kwon Eun-hee Centre to centre-right Conservative liberalism
National liberalism
Open Democratic Party
열린민주당
3 Lee Keun-shik Kim Jin-ae Centre to centre-left Social liberalism
Basic Income Party
기본소득당
1 Single-issue Universal Basic Income
(Single issue)
Period Transition
시대전환
1 Centre to centre-left Social liberalism

Extra-parliamentary parties

Conservative parties

Centrist parties

Liberal parties

Progressive parties

Single-issue parties

Unknown stances, third way, or syncretic parties

Defunct parties

Timeline of all mainstream political parties

Conservative parties

Mainstream parties

Minor parties

Liberal parties

Mainstream parties

Minor parties

Progressive parties

Green parties

Banned parties

See also

References

  1. Wong, Joseph (2015). "South Korea's Weakly Institutionalized Party System". Party System Institutionalization in Asia: Democracies, Autocracies, and the Shadows of the Past. Cambridge University Press. pp. 260–279.
  2. Wong, Joseph (2012). "Transitioning from a dominant party system to multi-party system: The case of South Korea". Friend or Foe? Dominant Party Systems in Southern Africa: Insights from the Developing World. United Nations University Press. pp. 68–84.
  3. The Democratic Party of Korea is described as a centrist party by numerous sources:
  4. The Democratic Party of Korea is described as a liberal party by numerous sources:
  5. "An Identity Crisis for South Korea's Opposition". The Diplomat. 31 December 2015. South Korea's main opposition social-liberal party is reeling (again) from intraparty factional struggle. Rebranded earlier this week "the Minjoo Party of Korea" (formerly New Politics Alliance for Democracy), the party is searching for a new identity and direction after high profile and popular assemblyperson Ahn Cheol-soo defected on December 13.
  6. "Three minor parties merge ahead of April elections". Yonhap News Agency. 24 February 2020. Last Monday, the main opposition Liberty Korea Party merged with the New Conservative Party and Forward for Future 4.0 to create the right-wing United Future Party (UFP).
  7. "Minor opposition party picks Rep. Shim Sang-jung as new chief". Yonhap News. 2015-07-18. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
  8. Yonhap News Agency, December 19, 2014, , “...South Korea's Constitutional Court on Friday ordered the dissolution of a pro-North Korean minor opposition party...”

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.