1978 South Korean presidential election

1978 South Korean presidential election

6 July 1978

2,581 members of the National Conference for Unification
1,291 votes needed to win
 
Nominee Park Chung-hee
Party Democratic Republican
Electoral vote 2,577

Votes of the National Conference for Unification
  Park Chung-hee: 2577
  Did not vote: 3
  Invalid/Blank: 1

President before election

Park Chung-hee
Democratic Republican

Elected President

Park Chung-hee
Democratic Republican

Presidential elections were held in South Korea on 6 July 1978, the second elections held under the Restoration Constitution, which gave the members of the National Conference for Unification the power to elect the president.

The National Conference for Unification was elected on 18 May, and the newly sworn-in delegates proceeded to elect the president on 6 July. As in 1972, incumbent President Park Chung-hee was the only candidate. He was duly re-elected with the support of 2,577 of the 2,581 members.[1] Park Chung Hee would continue in office for just over a year before his assassination on 26 October 1979 and the subsequent collapse of the Yushin regime.

National Conference for Unification election

The 2,583 members of the second National Conference for Unification were elected on 18 May 1978, with a voter turnout of 79%.

Province/City Turnout % Valid votes Delegates +/–
Seoul 2,754,086 67.8 2,665,140 391[a] +88
Busan 942,148 77.1 919,727 145 +41
Gyeonggi 1,634,742 78.2 1,593,630 319 +39
Gangwon 764,857 86.9 746,432 151 +6
North Chungcheong 577,877 87.0 562,148 131 +4
South Chungcheong 1,068,658 83.4 1,038,174 235[b] +4
North Jeolla 905,394 84.9 876,166 203 +3
South Jeolla 1,402,831 81.5 1,356,531 312 0
North Gyeongsang 1,833,990 84.4 1,790,763 379[b] +25
South Gyeongsang 1,255,860 83.0 1,223,490 290[c] +12
Jeju 178,633 86.9 173,977 27 +2
Total 13,319,076 78.9 12,946,178 2,583 +224
  1. ^ Two delegates were absent during the presidential election.
  2. ^ a b One seat was vacant as of 6 July 1978.
  3. ^ One delegate was absent during the presidential election.

The National Conference for Unification members elected in 1978 would later approve Park's slate of nominees for one-third of the National Assembly in December 1978, elect Choi Kyu-hah as president in 1979 after Park's assassination, and confirm Chun Doo-hwan as president in 1980 after Choi's overthrow.

Presidential election

By the time of the presidential election, one delegate had resigned and another had died, meaning there were a total of 2,581 delegates at the Conference on the day of the presidential election.

In order to be elected, a candidate had to receive the vote of over 50% of the incumbent members. With 2,581 delegates in office, Park had to receive at least 1,291 votes to be elected. He received 2,577 votes, 99.85% of the total possible.

As there was only one candidate registered, the only ways the delegates could express opposition to Park was by either abstaining or casting invalid ballots. The only delegate who cast a protest vote was Park Seung-guk of Daegu-2 District.[2]

CandidatePartyVotes%
Park Chung-heeDemocratic Republican Party2,577100.00
Total2,577100.00
Valid votes2,57799.96
Invalid/blank votes10.04
Total votes2,578100.00
Registered voters/turnout2,58199.88

References

  1. ^ Kleiner, Jurgen. (2001) Korea: A Century of Change. World Scientific. p. 164.
  2. ^ "김일 박치기에 온 국민 시름 잊고… '체육관 대통령' 선출 민주주의 시름 겪어". Hankook Ilbo (in Korean). 2015-02-06. Retrieved 2019-03-28.