South Korea’s elections have been mired in mudslinging, scandal and personal attacks intended to appeal to the country’s divided and increasingly polarised electorate.
Some analysts called it the “Squid Game election”.
Yoon Suk-yeol has emerged victorious.
In his victory speech on 9 March, Yoon promised to join hands with his rivals and “unite into one for the people and the country.”
The conservative, with no political or experience in foreign affairs has promised to investigate the outgoing progressive leader, Moon Jae-in, and take a much more combative stance against China and North Korea.
Beijing is unlikely to welcome Yoon Suk-yeol’s victory, and South Korea can not afford to alienate China.
But significant though these foreign policy shifts would be for the region’s geopolitics, the most immediate impact of Yoon’s presidency may be felt in South Korea’s domestic politics.
The country’s gender conflict is intensifying.
The new president cultivated support from South Korea’s burgeoning “men’s rights” and “anti-feminist” movement during the campaign.
South Korea has the largest gender pay gap of any country in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development – with women earning almost a third less than their male counterparts.
South Korea had one of the first #MeToo movements in Asia.
The anti-feminist movement was fuelled by economic grievances and complaints that efforts to improve gender equality were unfairly disadvantaging men.
Yoon Suk-yeol mobilised the ‘men’s rights’ movement and played to their concerns.
Yoon Suk-yeol pledged during the campaign to abolish the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family.
The move delivered him a sizeable boost among young male voters.
However, the move is unlikely to have the effect he has promised, writes @katiestallard.
Furthermore, in order to unite the country, he will need to start with the divisions he has helped to sow.
"To me and my friends, “he cried on me” was a new-found base in physical intimacy – I suppose this is because it felt like an antidote to years of “toxic masculinity” and the associated pressure on men to be “hard” and not talk about their mental health."
"You could tell that a lot of men have clocked this hype on the second season of Love is Blind, the Netflix reality dating show that has become popular among millennials."
Brexit, in its original form, is dead: killed by the new geopolitical realities created by the war in Ukraine. newstatesman.com/comment/2022/0…
"I doubt that the UK will rejoin the EU anytime soon, but its whole attitude to Europe will have to change – on defence, on energy and even on trade itself." | Writes @paulmasonnews
Brexit, Boris Johnson said, had set Britain free: “free to tread our own path, blessed with a global network of friends and partners, and with the opportunity to forge new and deeper relationships.”
Months after the fall of Kabul, thousands of Afghans are stuck in UK hotels - This article is FREE to read newstatesman.com/afghanistan/20…
On 29 August, two days after Marwa and her family arrived in the UK, the British government announced a resettlement package for the 8,000 Afghans airlifted out of the country as Kabul fell.
It dubbed the plan “Operation Warm Welcome”. Those resettled to the UK via official routes – including the Afghans who worked for the British government and had been relocated earlier in the year – would be granted indefinite leave to remain, it said.
Half of Kyiv’s residents have already left, according to its mayor. Those remaining in the capital have spent much of the war confined to their homes newstatesman.com/world/europe/u…
With every day that passes, the invaders aim at some new way of increasing the agony of Ukrainians: targeting civilian areas, shelling humanitarian corridors, and the prospect of chemical weapon attacks or of public executions
Taking Kyiv street by street would involve a bloodbath that Russia wants to avoid. Instead, its forces are hoping to terrify the population into submission.
The war in Ukraine has marked a turning point for the EU, and Emmanuel Macron is leading the way. newstatesman.com/international-…
By invading Ukraine, Vladimir Putin has solidified the Atlantic alliance, narrowed rifts between the US and its European partners and opened the way to possible Nato membership for Finland and Sweden.
He has also woken a sleeping strategic giant – the European Union.