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SEOUL, South Korea — South Korean lawmakers are set to vote for a second time Saturday on whether to impeach President Yoon Suk Yeol over his failed attempt to impose martial law, with support for the motion appearing to grow within his own party after he defiantly defended his actions.
There have been widespread calls for Yoon to step down since he declared emergency martial law last week, plunging the East Asian democracy and key U.S. ally into chaos. The short-lived order, which Yoon lifted within hours after lawmakers voted unanimously to reject it, banned all political activity and censored the news media.
Yoon, 63, who once served as the country’s chief prosecutor, is barred from traveling overseas as he faces investigation on possible rebellion charges. Police tried unsuccessfully on Wednesday to raid his office, where they were blocked by security officials.
In the meantime, Yoon’s governing People Power Party (PPP) says he is effectively suspended from duty and that it is working with Prime Minister Han Duck-soo to manage state affairs, raising questions about who is running the world’s 10th-largest economy.
Yoon, who took office in 2022 for a single five-year term, has struggled to advance his agenda in the opposition-controlled parliament, and the martial law declaration has only further eroded his public support. A Gallup Korea poll released Friday showed Yoon’s approval rating at a record low of 11%, the Yonhap news agency reported, down from 13% a week earlier.
Though Yoon has apologized twice for the “anxiety” his order caused the public, he vowed to “fight to the end” in a defiant speech on Thursday in which he accused the opposition of paralyzing the government to the point where he felt declaring martial law was his only choice.
Lee Jae-myung, leader of the main opposition Democratic Party, said Friday that Yoon’s speech was “a declaration of war against the people.”
“Impeachment is the quickest and surest way to end the crisis,” said Lee, who narrowly lost to Yoon in the 2022 presidential election.
He urged PPP lawmakers to vote in favor of the second impeachment motion, saying “history will remember and record your choice.”
Lee also thanked the United States and allied countries “for their consistent support” of democracy in South Korea, which hosts almost 30,000 American troops and spent decades under military-authoritarian rule.
The vote is set to take place Saturday around 4 p.m. local time (2 a.m. ET), one week after an earlier impeachment motion failed when PPP lawmakers boycotted the vote.
Six opposition parties submitted the new impeachment motion late Thursday. Though the opposition controls parliament, it is eight seats short of the 200 it needs for the bill to pass.
Since the first vote failed, at least seven PPP members have publicly said they now support impeachment, bringing the motion within one vote of passage.
If Yoon is impeached, the case would go to the Constitutional Court, which would then have six months to decide whether to uphold the impeachment motion.
Communist-ruled North Korea has seized on the political turmoil in the South, highlighting protests “demanding the impeachment of the puppet Yoon Suk Yeol regime” in a second day of state media coverage on Thursday after not reporting on the martial law declaration for a week. The two Koreas technically remain at war after the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice rather than a peace treaty.
Without providing evidence, Yoon, who takes a harder line on North Korea than his Democratic predecessor, had accused the opposition of sympathizing with the nuclear-armed state, citing it as justification for the martial law declaration when he announced it in a surprise late-night address on Dec. 3.
In his speech on Thursday, Yoon said without evidence that North Korea had hacked into South Korea’s National Election Commission last year, exposing security issues that he said called into question the integrity of the results of April’s parliamentary election, which the liberal opposition won in a landslide.
Kim Yong-bin, the commission’s secretary general, said Friday that there was no evidence of election fraud or that its system was hacked, saying all votes are cast with paper ballots.
“It is impossible to commit election fraud with our system,” he said.
After Yoon’s speech on Thursday, the leader of his party appeared to reverse his earlier stance and said the president must be impeached.
“The speech was a rationalization of this situation and de facto confession that he has committed rebellion,” PPP leader Han Dong-hoon said. “I propose that PPP adopt voting for the impeachment as our party platform.”
Stella Kim reported from Seoul, South Korea, and Jennifer Jett from Hong Kong.
Stella Kim is an NBC News freelance producer based in Seoul.
Jennifer Jett is the Asia Digital Editor for NBC News, based in Hong Kong.
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