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National Assembly (South Korea)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromParliament of South Korea)
Unicameral legislature of South Korea
For other uses, seeNational Assembly (disambiguation).
This article is about the South Korean Parliament and is not to be confused with the North KoreanSupreme People's Assembly.

National Assembly of the
Republic of Korea

대한민국 국회
大韓民國國會

Daehanminguk Gukhoe
22nd National Assembly
Emblem of the National Assembly of Korea (1948-2014).svg
Logo
Type
Type
Leadership
Woo Won-shik, Independent
Deputy Speaker
Lee Hak-young, Democratic
Secretary General
Kim Min-ki, Independent
Structure
Seats300
Political groups
Government (166)

Opposition (128)

Unclassified (6)

Length of term
4 years
SalaryUS$128,610
Elections
Mixed-member majoritarian representation (de jureMMP/AMS system, de factoparallel voting)
Last election
10 April 2024
Next election
By 12 April 2028
Meeting place
Main Conference Room
National Assembly Building,Seoul
37°31′55.21″N126°54′50.66″E / 37.5320028°N 126.9140722°E /37.5320028; 126.9140722
Website
assembly.go.krEdit this at Wikidata

TheNational Assembly of the Republic of Korea (Korean대한민국 국회) is theunicameral nationallegislature of South Korea.[c]Elections to the National Assembly are held every four years. The latestlegislative elections were held on 10 April 2024. The current National Assembly held its first meeting, and also began its current four year term, on 30 May 2024.[1][2] The current Speaker was elected 5 June 2024.[3][4] The National Assembly has 300 seats, with 254 constituency seats and 46 proportional representation seats; PR seats are assigned an additional member systemde jure but parallel votingde facto because the usage ofdecoy lists by the Democratic and People Power Parties is prevalent.

The unicameral assembly consists of at least 200 members according to theSouth Korean constitution. In 1990 the assembly had 299 seats, 224 of which were directly elected from single-member districts in thegeneral elections of April 1988. Under applicable laws, the remaining seventy-five representatives were elected from party lists. By law, candidates for election to the assembly must be at least thirty years of age. The National Assembly's term is four years. In a change from the more authoritarianFourth Republic andFifth Republic (1972–81 and 1981–87, respectively), under theSixth Republic, the assembly cannot be dissolved by the president.

This article is part ofa series on

Building

[edit]
Main article:National Assembly Proceeding Hall
TheNational Assembly Building inSeoul

The main building inYeouido, Seoul, is a stone structure with seven stories above ground and one story below ground. The building has 24 columns, which means the legislature's promise to listen to people 24/7 throughout the year.[5]

Structure and appointment

[edit]

Speaker

[edit]
Main article:Speaker of the National Assembly of South Korea

The constitution stipulates that the assembly is presided over by aSpeaker andtwo Deputy Speakers,[6] who are responsible for expediting the legislative process. The Speaker and Deputy Speakers are elected in a secret ballot by the members of the Assembly, and their term in office is restricted to two years.[7] The Speaker is independent of party affiliation (to compared to the two vice-speakers who are affiliated with the two leading political parties), and the Speaker and Deputy Speakers may not simultaneously be government ministers.[7]

TheSecretary General of the National Assembly is the head of the Secretariat of the National Assembly, which is the department that oversees the affairs of the National Assembly. They are government officials and are treated as ministers. (Ministerial level). As with the President of the National Assembly, party membership is limited and he must be affiliated to no political party during his term in the Assembly.

Negotiation groups

[edit]

Parties that hold at least 20 seats in the assembly form floor negotiation groups (교섭단체;交涉團體), which are entitled to a variety of rights that are denied to smaller parties. These include a greater amount of state funding and participation in the leaders' summits that determine the assembly's legislative agenda.[8]

In order to meet the quorum, theUnited Liberal Democrats, who then held 17 seats, arranged to "rent" three legislators from theMillennium Democratic Party. The legislators returned to the MDP after the collapse of theULD-MDP coalition in September 2001.[9]

Legislative process

[edit]
See also:Legislative elections in South Korea
This graph traces the recent origins of all six main political parties currently in the Republic of Korea. All of which have either split from or merged with other parties in the last four years. They have emerged from four main ideological camps, from Left to Right: Progressive (socialist), liberal, centrist, and conservative.

For a legislator to introduce a bill, they must submit the proposal to the Speaker, accompanied by the signatures of at least ten other assembly members. A committee must then review the bill to verify that it employs precise and orderly language. Following this, the Assembly may either approve or reject the bill.[10]

Committees

[edit]

There are 17 standing committees which examine bills and petitions falling under their respective jurisdictions, and perform other duties as prescribed by relevant laws.[11]

  • House Steering Committee
  • Legislation and Judiciary Committee
  • National Policy Committee
  • Strategy and Finance Committee
  • Education Committee
  • Science, ICT, Broadcasting and Communications Committee
  • Foreign Affairs and Unification Committee
  • National Defense Committee
  • Public Administration and Security Committee
  • Culture, Sports and Tourism Committee
  • Agriculture, Food, Rural Affairs, Oceans and Fisheries Committee
  • Trade, Industry, SMEs and Startups Committee
  • Health and Welfare Committee
  • Climate, Energy, Environment and Labor Committee
  • Land Infrastructure and Transport Committee
  • Intelligence Committee
  • Gender Equality and Family Committee

Election

[edit]
Allocation of seats within the electoral system. Red and green: parallel voting; 253 FPTP and 17 PR seats. Blue:additional member system for 30 seats
See also:Legislative elections in South Korea

The National Assembly has 300 seats, with 254 constituency seats underFPTP and 46 proportional representation seats. With electoral reform taken in 2019, the PR seats apportionment method was replaced by a variation ofadditional member system from the previousparallel voting system. However, 17 seats were temporarily assigned under parallel voting in the2020 South Korean legislative election.[12]

Per Article 189 of Public Official Election Act,[13][14] the PR seats are awarded to parties that have either obtained at least 3% of the total valid votes in the legislative election or at least five constituency seats. The number of seats allocated to each eligible party is decided by the formula:

ninitial=(nAssemblynineligibles)×PR votes rationobtained constituencies+12{\displaystyle n_{\text{initial}}=\left\lfloor {\frac {(n_{\text{Assembly}}-n_{\text{ineligibles}})\times {\text{PR votes ratio}}-n_{\text{obtained constituencies}}+1}{2}}\right\rfloor }

where

  • nAssembly = total number of seats in the National Assembly.
  • nineligibles = number of seats obtained by ineligible parties and independents.
  • nobtained constituencies = number of constituency seats obtained by the party.
  • nams = total number of seats allocated for additional member system.

If the integer is less than 1, thenninitial is set to 0 and the party does not get any seats. Then the sum of initially allocated seats is compared to the total seats for the additional member system and recalculated.

nremainder=(namsninitial)×PR votes ratio{\displaystyle n_{\text{remainder}}=\left(n_{\text{ams}}-\sum n_{\text{initial}}\right)\times {\text{PR votes ratio}}}

nfinal={ninitial+nremainder,if ninitial<namsnams×ninitialninitial,if ninitial>nams{\displaystyle n_{\text{final}}={\begin{cases}n_{\text{initial}}+n_{\text{remainder}},&{\text{if }}\sum n_{\text{initial}}<n_{\text{ams}}\\n_{\text{ams}}\times {\dfrac {n_{\text{initial}}}{\sum n_{\text{initial}}}},&{\text{if }}\sum n_{\text{initial}}>n_{\text{ams}}\end{cases}}}

Final seats are assigned through thelargest remainder method, and if the remainder is equal, the winner is determined by lottery among the relevant political parties.

Thevoting age was also lowered from 19 to 18 years old, expanding the electorate by over half a million voters.[15]

Legislative violence

[edit]

From 2004 to 2009, the assembly gained notoriety as a frequent site forlegislative violence.[16] The Assembly first came to the world's attention during a violent dispute on impeachment proceedings for then PresidentRoh Moo-hyun,[17][18] when open physical combat took place in the assembly. Since then, it has been interrupted by periodic conflagrations, piquing the world's curiosity once again in 2009 when members battled each other with sledgehammers and fire extinguishers. The National Assembly since then has taken preventive measures to prevent any more legislative violence.[19][20][21]

Historical composition

[edit]

  Progressive  Liberal  Conservative  Independent politician

ElectionTotal
seats
Composition
1st
(1948)
200
129851111111111261255
2nd
(1950)
210
224126111133101424
3rd
(1954)
203
1567133114
4th
(1958)
233
79261127
5th
(1960)
233
4117549112
6th
(1963)
175
401429110
7th
(1967)
175
145129
8th
(1971)
204
1891113
9th
(1973)
219
25219146
10th
(1978)
231
36122145
11th
(1981)
276
28121111225151
12th
(1985)
276
167351420148
13th
(1988)
299
17059935125
14th
(1992)
299
9721131149
15th
(1996)
299
79151650139
16th
(2000)
273
11551712133
17th
(2004)
299
101522914121
18th
(2008)
299
5813251815314
19th
(2012)
300
1312735152
20th
(2016)
300
61231138122
21st
(2020)
300
6318053103
22nd
(2024)
300
11751213108

History

[edit]

First Republic

[edit]
See also:First Republic of Korea

Elections for the assembly were held under UN supervision[22] on 10 May 1948. TheFirst Republic of Korea was established on 17 July 1948[23] when the constitution of the First Republic was established by the Assembly. The Assembly also had the job of electing thepresident and elected anti-communistSyngman Rhee as president on 20 July 1948.

Under the first constitution, the National Assembly was unicameral. Under the second and third constitutions, the National Assembly was to be bicameral and consist of theHouse of Representatives and theHouse of Councillors, but in practice, the legislature was unicameral because the House of Representatives was prevented from passing the law necessary to establish the House of Councillors.

  Progressive  Liberal  Conservative

  majority  plurality only  largest minority

National
Assembly
Majority
Party
Majority
Leader
SeatsSpeakerSeatsMinority
Leaders
Minority
Parties
1st
(1948)
 NARRKINA551948Rhee Syng-man(supported by NARRKI)
1948–1950Shin Ik-hee(supported by NARRKI until 1949)
29KDPDNP 
116others
2nd
(1950)
DNP24Shin Ik-hee(supported by DNP)24KNP
14NA
148others
3rd
(1954)
 LP114Yi Ki-bung(supported by LP)15DNPDP (55)
3NA
3KNP
68others
4th
(1958)
LP126Yi Ki-bung(supported by LP)79DP (55)
28others

Second Republic

[edit]
See also:Second Republic of Korea
House of RepresentativesMajority
Party
Majority
Leader
SeatsSpeakerSeatsMinority
Leaders
Minority
Parties
5th
(1960)
 DP (55)175Kwak Sang-hoon(supported by DP (55))58Others 
House of CouncillorsMajority
Party
Majority
Leader
SeatsPresidentSeatsMinority
Leaders
Minority
Parties
5th
(1960)
 DP (55)31Paek Nak-chun(supported by DP (55))27Others 

Third Republic

[edit]
See also:Third Republic of Korea

Since the reopening of the National Assembly in 1963 until today, it has been unicameral.

National
Assembly
Majority
Party
Majority
Leader
SeatsSpeakerSeatsMinority
Leaders
Minority
Parties
6th
(1963)
 DRP110Lee Hyu-sang(supported by DRP)41CRPDRPNDP 
13DP (55)DRPNDP
7th
(1967)
DRP129Lee Hyu-sang(supported by DRP)45NDP
8th
(1971)
 DRP113Baek Du-jin(supported by DRP)89NDP

Fourth Republic

[edit]
See also:Fourth Republic of Korea
National
Assembly
Majority
Party
Majority
Leader
SeatsSpeakerSeatsMinority
Leaders
Minority
Parties
9th
(1973)
 DRP+Presidential appointees146Chung Il-kwon(supported by DRP)52NDP 
10th
(1978)
DRP+Presidential appointees

KNP
1451978–1979Chung Il-kwon(supported by DRP)
1979Baek Du-jin(supported by DRP)
61NDP

Fifth Republic

[edit]
See also:Fifth Republic of Korea
National
Assembly
Majority
Party
Majority
Leader
SeatsSpeakerSeatsMinority
Leaders
Minority
Parties
11th
(1981)
 DJP1511981–1983Chung Rae-hyung(supported by DJP)
1983–1985Chae Mun-shik(supported by DJP)
81DKP 
25KNP
12th
(1985)
DJP148Lee Jae-hyung(supported by DJP)67NKDP
35DKP
20KNP

Sixth Republic

[edit]
See also:Sixth Republic of South Korea

  majority  plurality  largest minority

Term
(Election)
SpeakerConservative
current: PPP
Liberal
current: DP
Progressive
current: PP
Miscellaneous
right
Miscellaneous
left
Independent
13th (1988)Kim Jae-sun(1988–90)
Park Jyun-kyu(1990–92)
1257036599
14th (1992)Park Jyun-kyu(1992–93)
Hwang Nak-joo(1993)
Lee Man-sup(1993–94)
Park Jyun-kyu(1994–96)
149973121
15th (1996)Kim Soo-han(1996–98)
Park Jyun-kyu(1998–00)
139796516
16th (2000)Lee Man-sup(2000–02)
Park Kwan-yong(2002–04)
133115205
17th (2004)Kim Won-ki(2004–06)
Lim Chae-jung(2006–08)
12115210493
18th (2008)Kim Hyong-o(2008–10)
Park Hee-tae(2010–12)
Chung Eui-hwa(2012)
15381532325
19th (2012)Kang Chang-hee(2012–14)
Chung Ui-hwa(2014–16)
1521271353
20th (2016)Chung Sye-kyun(2016–18)
Moon Hee-sang(2018–20)
12212363811
21st (2020)Park Byeong-seug(2020–22)
Kim Jin-pyo(2022–24)
1031806335
22nd (2024)Woo Won-shik(2024–26)10817133150

Members

[edit]
Main article:Lists of members of the National Assembly (South Korea)

Television broadcast

[edit]
Main article:National Assembly TV

Symbols

[edit]
  • Emblem of the National Assembly (1947–2014)
    Emblem of the National Assembly (1947–2014)
  • Flag of the National Assembly (1947–2014)
    Flag of the National Assembly (1947–2014)
  • Flag of the National Assembly (from 2014)
    Flag of the National Assembly (from 2014)

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^National Assembly SpeakerWoo Won-shik and independentKim Jong-min, Choi Hyuk-jin, and Lee Choon-suak
  2. ^Gyeyang B and Asan B
  3. ^Article 21, Clause 1 of the Election Law

References

[edit]
  1. ^"1st meeting of 22nd parliament's DP lawmakers".Yonhap News Agency. 30 May 2024. Retrieved2 June 2024.
  2. ^Yi, Wonju (30 May 2024)."National Assembly begins new 4-year term".Yonhap News Agency. Retrieved4 June 2024.
  3. ^"DP's Woo Won-shik Elected as Speaker of 22nd National Assembly amid PPP Boycott". 5 June 2024. Retrieved5 June 2024.
  4. ^Lee, Jung-joo (30 May 2024)."22nd Assembly begins new 4-year term".The Korea Herald. Retrieved2 June 2024.
  5. ^"HISTORY & HERITAGE".The National Assembly of the Republic of Korea.
  6. ^Article 48 of the Constitution of the Republic of Korea.
  7. ^abPark, Young-Do (2010). "Kapitel 2: Verfassungsrecht".Einführung in das koreanische Recht [Introduction to Korean Law] (in German). Springer. p. 25.ISBN 9783642116032.
  8. ^Youngmi Kim (2011).The Politics of Coalition in South Korea. Taylor & Francis, p. 65.
  9. ^Y. Kim, pp. 68–9.
  10. ^Park 2010, p. 27.
  11. ^"Standing Committees and Special Committees of the National Assembly".National Assembly (in Korean).
  12. ^김, 광태 (23 December 2019)."(2nd LD) Opposition party launches filibuster against electoral reform bill".Yonhap News Agency.Archived from the original on 3 January 2020. Retrieved3 January 2020.
  13. ^국가법령정보센터.www.law.go.kr. Retrieved26 January 2023.
  14. ^국가법령정보센터.www.law.go.kr. Retrieved26 January 2023.
  15. ^"18-year-olds Hit the Polls for First Time in S. Korea".Korea Bizwire. 15 April 2020.Archived from the original on 19 April 2020. Retrieved19 April 2020.
  16. ^"The World's Most Unruly Parliaments". 16 September 2009.
  17. ^"South Korean president impeached".news.bbc.co.uk. 12 March 2004.
  18. ^"In pictures: Impeachment battle".news.bbc.co.uk. 12 March 2004.
  19. ^Glionna, John M. (28 January 2009)."South Korea lawmakers: Reaching across the aisle with a sledgehammer".Los Angeles Times.
  20. ^"South Korean politicians use fire extinguishers against opposition".www.telegraph.co.uk. 18 December 2008.Archived from the original on 12 January 2022.
  21. ^"Hall of Violence". 2 March 2009.Archived from the original on 2 March 2016. Retrieved19 February 2016.
  22. ^Setting the StageArchived 16 July 2007 at theWayback Machine
  23. ^ICL – South Korea IndexArchived 13 December 2006 at theWayback Machine
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