People Power Party in free fall

The latest polling from Gallup Korea offers more than a snapshot of shifting public opinion. It delivers a stark warning about the structural health of Korea’s democracy. While the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) has surged to 48 percent support, the main opposition People Power Party has fallen to a historic low of 18 percent. The 30 percentage point gap is not merely a political setback; it signals a crisis of viability for the country’s main conservative party and raises broader concerns about the erosion of democratic balance. At the center of this collapse lies a failure of leadership. Party chairman Jang Dong-hyeok and his inner circle have consistently failed to make a decisive break from former President Yoon Suk Yeol. Rhetorical gestures toward severing ties have not been matched by meaningful action. Instead, the party appears hesitant and calculating, caught between appeasing a shrinking base and reclaiming broader public trust. This indecision has had predictable consequences. Moderate voters, who often determine electoral outcomes, have drifted away in large num

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