
Lee Jae-myung stresses peace on Korean Peninsula; Kim Moon-soo calls for stronger NK nuclear deterrence
During a four-way televised debate aired on Tuesday, Lee said peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula are "very important," adding that dialogue, cooperation and peace are necessary on the Korean Peninsula, on the foundation of galvanized military strength, as well as the alliance between Seoul and Washington.
Lee also blamed the former conservative Yoon Suk Yeol administration's hardline stance against North Korea for heightening border tensions between the two Koreas, saying the Yoon administration failed to take action to stop anti-North propaganda leaflet campaigns from the South. Lee added that he would "resolve (border tensions) one by one."
Meanwhile, Lee's conservative rival, the People Power Party's candidate Kim Moon-soo, said he would work to strengthen South Korea's nuclear deterrence on the foundation of the Seoul-Washington alliance to counter North Korea's nuclear threats and missile provocations.
"We will create a South Korea that will not be shaken by any threat by achieving a balance of power," said Kim.
During the debate, Kim said there is a realistic plan to devise a unique nuclear sharing model with the United States, which his rival Lee said "will make it impossible to achieve denuclearization on the Korean Peninsula."
Kim also said he would foster transparent inter-Korean relations and deal with North Korea confidently, while blasting his liberal rival for alleged involvement in an aide's unauthorized money transfer to North Korea while Lee was serving as governor of Gyeonggi Province.
Lee of the Democratic Party was 9 percentage points ahead in the race against Kim, according to a poll by Next Research on Tuesday.
Healing political divide
Tuesday's debate was the last of the three legally required to be hosted by the election authorities, with just one week remaining until the election to replace ousted former President Yoon.
Alongside foreign policy, the televised debate also focused on political polarization and ways to heal the political divide.
Debating how they would overcome Korea's deepening political polarization, the three leading candidates each pointed to different root causes — offering divergent views on what fractured the country's democracy and how to repair it.
The Democratic Party's Lee pointed to former President Yoon Suk Yeol's controversial martial law declaration on Dec. 3 as the origin of the political breakdown, describing it as an attempt to erase the opposition.
'The essence of that martial law attempt was to annihilate the opposition and permanently monopolize power,' he said.
Lee argued that the lingering presence of those who supported the emergency decree continues to polarize the country.
During Tuesday's debate, Lee again proposed a broad constitutional amendment to limit presidential authority and reinforce checks and balances, including a two-term presidency and run-off elections.
However, the People Power Party's Kim accused Lee of failing to acknowledge criminal wrongdoing, which he said threatens democracy, as well as allegations that his Democratic Party abused its legislative power to protect its leader.
'How can someone facing five serious charges run for president?' Kim said. 'He should stand trial and accept the outcome.'
In response, Lee dismissed criticism of his legal troubles as political retaliation, claiming, 'These indictments are fabricated by a prosecutorial regime.' Yoon served as prosecutor general of South Korea before he won the presidential election in 2022.
Kim also rejected Lee's characterization of the Dec. 3 event as an insurrection, citing an ongoing criminal trial against the suspects involved in the failed martial law attempt.
Meanwhile, New Reform Party candidate Rep. Lee Jun-seok pointed to what he called 'false narratives and fan-driven politics' as the primary sources of polarization, directly naming both Lee Jae-myung and Kim as figures associated with such narratives. He accused them of distorting facts and undermining public trust in the democratic process.
Positioning himself as a political outsider, Lee said Korea's political norms had collapsed as major parties abandoned long-standing rules of bipartisan consensus. He pledged to restore procedural fairness in lawmaking and constitutional reform. Citing French President Emmanuel Macron, he added, 'We may only have three seats, but we can trigger structural change.'
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