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[Point Economy] Two months ahead of the June 3 local elections, the Busan chapter of the Democratic Party announced the winners of the Dongnae, Yeongdo and Sasang district mayoral primaries on the evening of the 11th, effectively moving the contest for municipal leadership into its final phase.
In Dongnae, Tak Young-il defeated Ju Sun-hee to become the party’s nominee. Kim Cheol-hoon prevailed over Park Seong-yun in Yeongdo, and Seo Tae-kyung narrowly beat Kim Bu-min in Sasang.
Several races had been converted into primaries after objections to sole endorsements, raising concerns about negative campaigning. With the results announced, however, the party appears to have tamped down those tensions for now.
Among Busan’s 16 municipal head contests, only the Seogu (West District) mayoral runoff remains. That runoff will be held over two days, from the 17th through the 18th.
The confirmed slate of Democratic Party municipal candidates in Busan shows a notable advance for women. Six female candidates — Seo Eun-sook for Busanjin District mayor, Jeong Myung-hee for Buk District, Kim Jin for Suyeong District, Kim Kyung-ji for Geumjeong District, Woo Seong-bin for Gijang County mayor, and Kang Hee-eun for Jung District — have secured nominations.
As it wraps up mayoral nominations, the Busan chapter will also accelerate primaries for confirmed metropolitan assembly candidates, municipal council candidates and proportional representation slots. With about two months until the June 3 elections, the Democratic Party’s Busan nominating process has entered its final stage.
The primary outcomes carry implications beyond candidate selection.
Busan has long been a conservative stronghold. While the People Power Party has been mired in internal strife and nomination disputes in the wake of the presidential impeachment fallout, the Busan Democratic Party has methodically closed out primaries for 16 municipal posts. That disciplined approach appears intended to project the image of a “prepared governing party.”
The prominent placement of six women is especially significant. Observers view it not merely as a diversity measure but as a strategic effort to exploit a gap left by the conservative camp’s inability to retain female voters in their 20s and 30s after the impeachment crisis. It signals that Busan’s Democratic Party is positioning “change” as a central theme.
Still, it is uncertain whether the truce over primary disputes will translate into durable unity. Defections or lingering bitterness among losing camps can sap competitiveness in the general election. Before a full-scale showdown with People Power Party candidates in Busan, quickly consolidating internal support is the Democratic Party’s immediate priority.











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