(4th LD) National Assembly confirms PM nominee Han
(ATTN: REPLACES photos)
By Joo Kyung-don
SEOUL, May 20 (Yonhap) -- The National Assembly confirmed Prime Minister nominee Han Duck-soo on Friday after the main opposition Democratic Party (DP) holding a majority in the parliament decided to approve the nomination.
Han's nomination was approved in a 208-36 vote, 47 days after he was nominated by President Yoon Suk-yeol.
In South Korea, the prime minister is the only Cabinet post that requires parliamentary approval.
The result came after the DP decided to confirm Han in a general meeting of its lawmakers amid concern that rejecting the nomination could backfire and hurt its chances in next month's local elections.
The party had the ultimate say in confirming Han as the country's No. 2 official, as it holds 167 seats in the 300-seat National Assembly. The ruling People Power Party, meanwhile, has 109 seats.
"I will do my best to serve the president and to make and run a country that prioritizes our national interests and the people with greater responsibility," Han told reporters.
Han also vowed to actively push for deregulation, the recovery of financial soundness and national unity.
The presidential office welcomed the parliamentary approval, vowing to work more closely with the opposition party.
The DP has been mulling for weeks on whether to approve Han, with hardliners insisting the party should veto the nomination, because Yoon showed no willingness to cooperate with the opposition, as seen by the appointment of Justice Minister Han Dong-hoon.
Despite the DP's strong objections, Yoon pressed ahead and appointed the justice minister Tuesday.
The DP's confirmation hearing committee has declared Han as "unqualified," citing his post-retirement career at a law firm and other suspected irregularities.
But others in the DP claimed the party should endorse Han, since the rejection could backfire and undermine the DP's chances in the upcoming local elections, with criticism that the party is hindering the operation of the new government from the start.
With the approval, Han will take the country's No. 2 job for the second time. The 72-year-old already served as the prime minister during the liberal Roh Moo-hyun administration from 2007 to 2008.
During his confirmation hearing, Han said stabilizing the economy for ordinary people's livelihoods will be his top priority.
The parliamentary endorsement for Han is expected to provide much-needed momentum to the Yoon administration in dealing with the recovery from the COVID-19 crisis and rising tensions on the Korean Peninsula sparked by a series of provocations from North Korea.
kdon@yna.co.kr
graceoh@yna.co.kr
(END)
-
(Movie Review) 'Troll Factory' navigates blurred line between fake, real with anticlimactic finale
-
Police officer admits to leaking investigation report into late actor Lee Sun-kyun
-
'Parasyte: The Grey' adapts Japanese alien invasion manga to Korean setting
-
S. Korea, U.S. launch task force to block N. Korea's nuclear, missile programs
-
N. Korean leader sends condolences to Putin over Russian concert hall shooting
-
(Movie Review) 'Troll Factory' navigates blurred line between fake, real with anticlimactic finale
-
'Parasyte: The Grey' adapts Japanese alien invasion manga to Korean setting
-
Police officer admits to leaking investigation report into late actor Lee Sun-kyun
-
Congenital diseases of children born from mothers working at Samsung recognized as industrial accidents
-
N. Korean leader sends condolences to Putin over Russian concert hall shooting
-
S. Korea, U.S. launch task force to block N. Korea's nuclear, missile programs
-
Unification minister slams N. Korea's abduction, detention of S. Koreans as inhumane
-
(LEAD) S. Korea, U.S. launch task force to block N. Korea's nuclear, missile programs
-
Major hospitals in emergency mode amid huge losses over doctors' walkout
-
Seoul bus drivers go on general strike