Opposition’s Lee leading South Korea presidential race: poll

An official inspects the ballots submitted by South Korean citizens living abroad for the upcoming presidential election, at Incheon International Airport International Postal Logistics Center in Incheon, South Korea. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 27 May 2025
Follow

Opposition’s Lee leading South Korea presidential race: poll

  • Democratic Party leader Lee Jae-myung is set to become the country’s next president according to a Gallup poll

SEOUL: A Gallup poll released Tuesday indicates South Korean opposition leader Lee Jae-myung is the clear frontrunner to become the country’s next president, with less than a week to go until the elections.
South Koreans go to the polls on June 3, capping months of political turmoil triggered by ex-leader Yoon Suk Yeol’s ill-fated effort to suspend civilian rule in December.
Gallup put Democratic Party leader Lee as the clear frontrunner, with 49 percent of the respondents stating they saw him as the best candidate.
Trailing behind is conservative former labor minister Kim Moon-soo of the ruling People Power Party at 35 percent.
In third place is Lee Jun-seok of the Reform Party — running a campaign targeting South Korean youth — with 11 percent.
The poll, conducted by Gallup Korea over the phone, surveyed 1,004 respondents over the weekend, with a stated margin of error of 3.1 percentage points.
The poll suggested the Democratic Party leader would win handily in almost all of the country, securing the most populous regions of capital Seoul, Incheon and Gyeonggi.
Third place Lee Jun-seok has faced growing pressure from conservatives to abandon his presidential bid to stop left-leaning Lee Jae-myung from winning.
But the 40-year-old has remained firm, declaring that his name will be “clearly visible” on the ballot on election day.
Around five percent of those polled said they had no preference or that they did not know who would be the best candidate.
The survey is one of the last to be released before next week’s vote, with further polls in the run-up banned.
Conservative candidate Kim shot to public attention in the aftermath of Yoon’s martial law debacle, when he declined to bow in apology to the public for failing to prevent the suspension of civilian rule.
After trailing behind Lee Jae-myung for weeks, he is slowly catching up.
A poll by Next Research released Monday suggested the gap between the two candidates had narrowed to just nine percentage points nationwide, and in Seoul to a mere 3.2 points.
Lee lost the 2022 presidential elections to Yoon by the smallest margin of any vote in the country’s history.

Tuesday’s poll indicated Lee Jae-myung would win even if he faced a unified conservative candidate.
And Lee Jun-seok at a press conference on Tuesday vowed there would be “no candidate merger” with “those responsible for the emergency martial law.”
“I will fight to the end and win,” he said.
Heo Jin-jae, research director at Gallup Korea, said the fact that the election was now a “three way race” — with a third candidate polling in double digits — was noteworthy.
But, he added, “even if Kim Moon-soo and Lee Jun-seok successfully unified their candidacy, I believe it will not be easy for them to win.”


Ukraine’s Zelensky: We have backed US peace proposals to get a deal done

Updated 13 February 2026
Follow

Ukraine’s Zelensky: We have backed US peace proposals to get a deal done

  • “The tactic we chose is for the Americans not to think that we want to continue the war,” Zelensky ‌told The Atlantic

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Kyiv ‌had sought to back US peace proposals to end the war with Russia as President Donald Trump seeks to resolve the conflict before ​November mid-term elections.
Zelensky, in an interview published by The Atlantic on Thursday, said Kyiv was willing to hold both a presidential election and a referendum on a deal, but would not settle for an accord that was detrimental to Ukraine’s interests.
“The tactic we chose is for the Americans not to think that we want to continue the war,” Zelensky ‌told the ‌US-based publication. “That’s why we started supporting their ​proposals in ‌any ⁠format ​that speeds ⁠things along.”
He said Ukraine was “not afraid of anything. Are we ready for elections? We’re ready. Are we ready for a referendum? We’re ready.”
Zelensky has sought to build good relations with Washington since an Oval Office meeting in February 2025 descended into a shouting match with Trump and US Vice President JD ⁠Vance.
But he said he had rejected a ‌proposal, reported this week by the ‌Financial Times, to announce the votes ​on February 24, the fourth ‌anniversary of Russia’s invasion. A ceasefire and proposed US security ‌guarantees against a future invasion had not yet been settled, he said.
“No one is clinging to power,” The Atlantic quoted him as saying. “I am ready for elections. But for that we need security, guarantees ‌of security, a ceasefire.”
And he added: “I don’t think we should put a bad deal ⁠up for a ⁠referendum.”
Russian President Vladimir Putin has said Zelensky is not a legitimate negotiating partner because he has not faced election since coming to power in 2019.
Zelensky has said in recent weeks that a document on security guarantees for Ukraine is all but ready to be signed.
But, in his remarks, he acknowledged that details remained unresolved, including whether the US would be willing to shoot down incoming missiles over Ukraine if Russia were to violate the peace.
“This hasn’t been fixed ​yet,” Zelensky said. “We have raised ​it, and we will continue to raise these questions...We need all of this to be written out.”