Thanks for including my @cfr.org analysis on the South Korean election in your list!
Thanks for including my @cfr.org analysis on the South Korean election in your list!
What’s behind South Korea’s progressive foreign policy’s shift toward pragmatism? @darciedraudt.bsky.social broke down a key example in her latest paper:
Learn more from Darcie – just in time for South Korea’s historic election – here: carnegieendowment.org/research/202...
Lee Jae-myung emerged as the winner of this week’s election in South Korea. But questions also emerge from the country’s turbulent past few months and polarized present – and a chaotic global foreign policy landscape.
@darciedraudt.bsky.social breaks it down: www.youtube.com/watch?v=vlCE...
As frontrunner Lee Jae-myung gears up for South Korea's June 3 special election, his party's foreign policy has undergone a transformation from progressivism to pragmatism.
@darciedraudt.bsky.social explains: carnegieendowment.org/research/202...
South Korea’s former president, Yoon Suk Yeol, was formally impeached two months ago. Now, as South Koreans head to a historic special election what’s next?
@darciedraudt.bsky.social breaks it down: www.youtube.com/watch?v=yA6o...
In the latest installment of my analysis of the upcoming South Korean election, I discuss how the Trump-tariff effect has influenced security and economic debates int the upcoming South Korean election for @cfr.org on.cfr.org/3HtzNbm
Thanks, Ankit!
Is presidential frontrunner Lee Jae-myung's swing to the center just a campaign tactic, or does it indicate a new direction for South Korea’s foreign policy?
@darciedraudt.bsky.social unpacks the present – and future – implications in her latest for Emissary: carnegieendowment.org/emissary/202...
Been doing a lot of thinking about what Lee Jae-myung means for Korean politics. I'll be sharing a longer report next week, but my analysis of Lee's "right-clicking" is up @carnegieendowment.org now:
carnegieendowment.org/emissary/202...
On Monday 5/19 at KEI in Washington, I'll be sharing some of the findings of my paper "Beyond the Demographic Cliff: Economic Adaptation in Hyper-Aged Korea"--come in person at 11 am EST or stream online!
keia.org/event/beyond...
Today marks 100 days of Trump’s second term—and South Korea’s alliance anxieties may be deepening. Without a president in Seoul and facing a transactional US, economic and security pressures mount. My take for
@carnegieendowment.org's 'Trump 2.0' series: carnegieendowment.org/emissary/202...
Had a blast getting super wonky with @korea.csis.org @victordcha.bsky.social Andrew Yeo and Yoojin Kim on how to unpack the Korean impeachment process and what it means for the country going forward! www.youtube.com/watch?v=-vuw...
Moving forward, South Korea must bridge its ideological divides and rebuild trust in its institutions. The coming election will test whether the nation can forge a unified path toward democratic resilience at the societal level.
Although progressive support stayed strong (unsurprising, since both presidents were conservatives), conservative backing fell from 50% in 2017 to 22% in 2025, and centrist approval dropped from 86% to 67%.
Korea is no stranger to presidential abuse of power, having ousted Park Geun-hye in 2017. But now, support for President Yoon's impeachment is significantly lower than for Park's in 2017, when 77% of Koreans backed her removal.
The country remains deeply divided, with a narrow majority 57% of Koreans supporting the impeachment as a necessary stand against creeping authoritarianism. But pro-Yoon factions view the process as a partisan power grab that undermines their ideological values.
After a historic ruling, Korea’s Constitutional Court upheld the impeachment of Pres Yoon Suk-yeol—a bold rebuke against authoritarian overreach. Yet the victory for democracy comes with a caveat: deep partisan divides have only widened @carnegieendowment.org carnegieendowment.org/emissary/202...
🔴 LIVE NOW
The Constitutional Court unanimously upheld President Yoon Suk Yeol's impeachment. Join @csis.org @geopolitics.csis.org
Impossible State Live Podcast with:
◾ @victordcha.bsky.social
◾ Yoojin Kim
◾ Andrew Yeo
◾ @darciedraudt.bsky.social
🔗: www.youtube.com/watch?v=-vuw...
Today, South Korea’s Constitutional Court formally removed impeached President Yoon Suk-yeol. But stark divisions among South Koreans will mean an uncertain future, writes @darciedraudt.bsky.social.
Read Darcie’s assessment of the situation here: carnegieendowment.org/emissary/202...
On today’s #DogShirtTV, @benjaminwittes.bsky.social & Alicia Wanless @lageneralista.ca welcome @darciedraudt.bsky.social to discuss what 10,000 #NorthKorean soldiers are doing in #Ukraine & the broader implications for North Korea’s future.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=97G7...
ICYMI
We hosted another great discussion on South Korea's political crisis, President Yoon's martial law, his impeachment & what's next this morning with the great @darciedraudt.bsky.social, Bruce Klingner, moderated by @csis.org @victordcha.bsky.social.
Watch here
www.youtube.com/watch?v=wVpa...
Really good point by @joelatkinson.bsky.social. PPP and many conservative citizens fear not just losing control of the executive, but also have a near-existential fear losing the ideological underpinnings of the nation. What does party loyalty mean in this case? What political game are we playing?
Article says that Han Dong-hoon will announce a road map to shortening Yoon’s term as an alternative to impeachment.
Maybe spoke too soon. According to this about 20 of the 108 PPP lawmakers remain, incl. Ahn Cheol-soo, who has expressed support for the impeachment motion, pro-Han Dong-hoon lawmakers such as Han Ji-ah, Kwak Kyu-taek, Park Jung-ha, Seo Beon-soo, Ko Dong-jin, Bae Hyun-jin, Kim Seong-won, and...
The plot twist is that, during a post-vote presser, Kim reveals that, and I am summarizing, "I am a conservative and will vote the party line", which is to oppose impeachment. He added that he doesn't support boycotting the vote.
Special Blue Blaze post on the political earthquake in South Korea—by guest contributor Dr Eun A Jo
open.substack.com/pub/blueblaz...
Varieties of State-Building: Ecology, Clientelism, and Bureaucratic Rule in Chile | Perspectives on Politics | www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
A martial law declaration, a swift reversal, & now, possible impeachment & treason investigations—President Yoon Suk-yeol has sent shock waves throughout South Korea.
In this #CarnegieExplains, @darciedraudt.bsky.social explores what's next & what it means for Korean democracy⬇️
youtu.be/sVsaYXHCSvE
What just happened in South Korea? My short explainer video for what happened with Yoon's martial law and what to look for in coming days now up @carnegieendow.bsky.social youtu.be/sVsaYXHCSvE?...