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|
Bareun Party 바른정당 | |
|---|---|
| Leader | Yoo Seong-min |
| Floor leader | Oh Sin-hwan |
| Secretary General | Kim Sung-dong |
| Chairman of the Policy Planning Committee | Ji Sang-wook |
| Founded | 27 December 2016 (2016-12-27) (as a parliamentary group) 25 January 2017 (2017-01-25) (as a political party) |
| Dissolved | 13 February 2018 (2018-02-13)[1] |
| Split from | Saenuri Party |
| Merged into | Bareunmirae Party |
| Ideology | Conservatism (South Korean)[2] |
| Political position | Centre-right[3] Faction: Right wing[2] |
| Colors | Sky Blue[4] |
| Party flag | |
| Website | |
| bareun | |
| Bareun Party | |
| Hangul | 바른정당 |
|---|---|
| Hanja | 바른政黨 |
| RR | Bareun jeongdang |
| MR | Parŭn chŏngdang |
| Conservative New Party for Reform | |
| Hangul | 개혁보수신당 |
| Hanja | 改革保守新黨 |
| RR | Gaehyeok bosu sindang |
| MR | Kaehyŏk posu sindang |
TheBareun Party (Korean: 바른정당;lit. Righteous Political Party) was aconservative[2][5][6]political party inSouth Korea, announced on 27 December 2016 with the defection of 29 anti-ParkSaenuri Party lawmakers. It was known as theConservative New Party for Reform until 8 January 2017.[7]
The party was formed amidst a faction feud in theLiberty Korea Party (thenSaenuri Party) involving pro and anti-Park Geun-hye forces.[8] The party began as a parliamentary negotiation body that split from the Saenuri Party in December 2016, and became a party in January 2017.[8]
In January 2018, the party's leader, along with thePeople's Party leaderAhn Cheol-soo, announced their plans to merge the two parties, in an effort to bolster the two party's parliamentary standing ahead oflocal elections in June.[9]
The merger faces opposition from members of both parties, citing concerns over differences in ideology and policy, particularly over differing stances on dealing withNorth Korea.[9] Nevertheless, the party approved the merger plans on 5 February 2018.[10] The merger is expected to be finalized on February 13.[11]
During its existence, the party suffered from a spate of defections.
By April 2017, the party had already lost 14 lawmakers.[12]
In May, a week before thepresidential election, 13 lawmakers affiliated with the party announced their decision to defect and return to the LKP.[12] The decision came after the party's presidential candidate,Yoo Seong-min, declined to join forces with LKP'sHong Joon-pyo and PP's Ahn Cheol-soo and field a single presidential candidate.[12] The defection left the party with just 19 seats in the National Assembly, one short of the 20 required for a political party to be recognized as a negotiating body.[12]
Ahead of a leadership contest in November 2017, an additional eight lawmakers defected, and rejoined the LKP.[13] The eight lawmakers were later joined by the party's floor leader,Joo-Ho-young.[14]
On 9 January 2018, lawmaker Kim Se-yeon,[15]Gyeonggi Province GovernorNam Kyung-pil,[16] and lawmakerPark In-sook[16] defected from the party, all of whom rejoined the LKP.[16]
| Election | Candidate | Votes | % | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | Yoo Seung-min | 2,208,771 | 6.76 | Not elected |
Oh filled the void left by Joo Ho-young who bolted from the party last month to join the main opposition Liberty Korea Party (LKP).