SEOUL, South Korea — The winner of Tuesday's presidential election in South Korea will take office just a day later, forgoing the usual, two-month transition to serve a full, five-year term at a time when the country faces a deepening political divide and external challenges such as U.S. tariffs and North Korea's expanding military partnership with Russia.
Surveys show liberal Lee Jae-myung maintaining a solid lead over his main conservative rival Kim Moon Soo. The snap election came about two months after President Yoon Suk Yeol was removed from office over the conservative's short-lived imposition of martial law in December.
Here is a look at the main candidates:
Lee pushed for Yoon's impeachment
Lee, 60, the Democratic Party candidate, was the driving force behind an opposition-led campaign to oust Yoon, whose Dec. 3 martial law decree plunged South Korea into turmoil.
Lee said he initially thought Yoon's late-night, televised martial law announcement was a digital deepfake when his wife told him of the news. After realizing it was real, Lee, then the party's chairman, ordered all his party lawmakers to rush to the National Assembly to vote down Yoon's decree. He then livestreamed his moves to the assembly, urging the public to gather there to protest Yoon's action.
Enough lawmakers ultimately managed to enter an assembly hall to overturn Yoon's decree, with troops sent by Yoon apparently mostly reluctant to use physical force to seal the assembly building. Lee later led an assembly vote to impeach Yoon before the Constitutional Court formally ousted him in early April.
''The rebellion was subdued, and Yoon Suk Yeol was dismissed. The long, severe winter has passed, and spring has come again. The people have finally made it,'' Lee said in a book published in mid-April.