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Korean Social Democratic Party


FieldValue
logoEmblem of Korean Social Democratic Party.svg
colorcode
leader1_titleChairman
leader1_nameKim Ho-chol
leader2_titleVice-Chairman
leader2_nameRi Kum-chol
founderCho Man-sik
foundation
ideologySocial democracy (*de jure*)
nationalDemocratic Front for the Reunification of Korea
(1949–2024)
headquartersPyongyang
newspaper
membership30,000+ (2007 )
slogan*Independence, sovereignty, democracy, peace and the defence of human rights*
flagFlag of the Social Democratic Party of Korea.svg
seats1_titleSupreme People's Assembly
seats1
countryNorth Korea

(1949–2024)

The Korean Social Democratic Party (KSDP; ) is a political party in North Korea that is allied with the ruling Workers' Party of Korea (WPK).

It was formed on 3 November 1945 as the Korean Democratic Party by a mixed group of entrepreneurs, merchants, handicraftsmen, petite bourgeoisie, peasants, and Christians led by Cho Man-sik. The party's founders were motivated by anti-imperialist and anti-feudal aspirations, and aimed to eliminate the legacy of Japanese rule and build a new democratic society. Cho was arrested by Soviet authorities in 1946, followed by a purge of his supporters from the party. Subsequently, the party came under greater influence of the WPK. Since then, it has acted as a satellite party of the WPK. In 1980, it was renamed to the Korean Social Democratic Party.

History

The party was established in Pyongyang by Cho Man-sik on 3 November 1945 as the Korean Democratic Party (조선민주당). It quickly gained support from Christian businessmen and intellectuals, as well as well-off workers, and had around half a million members after only a few weeks, Cho was forced to appoint Choe Yong-gon, a secret communist sympathizer, as his deputy in the party, while the communists increasingly targeted the party for infiltration.

Cho opposed the results of the Moscow Conference in December 1945, in which the foreign ministers of the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom and the United States agreed to establish a joint trusteeship over the formerly Japanese-occupied Korea, which triggered widespread opposition and protests. The KDP Central Committee's Plenum on 2 January 1946 formally voted against the trusteeship plan, and on 5 January, Cho resigned from his position as chairman of the Provisional People's Committee for the Five Provinces, leading many KDP members to follow his example.

Shortly after his resignation, he was arrested by Soviet authorities. Cho's arrest led to many of the party's leaders moving to Seoul in South Korea, where they set up a new headquarters; the party nominated five candidates for the May 1948 Constitutional Assembly elections in South Korea, winning one seat, taken by Yi Yun-yong. In North Korea, the party held its first Congress on 24 February 1946, when Choe Yong-gon was formally elected as leader of the party while Cho Man-sik was declared as "a traitor to the nation and a hireling of American and Japanese imperialism". A purge of Cho's alleged or real sympathizers in the party took place afterwards.

The KDP subsequently joined the newly-established North Korean Fatherland United Democratic Front on 22 July, effectively becoming subordinate to the newly-emerging Communist Party of Korea (which later became the Workers' Party of Korea). The KDP held its Second Congress on 13–15 April 1947, where it continued to attack Cho, praised the "liberating mission of the heroic Soviet Army" and adopted a structure closely resembling that of the Workers' Party of North Korea.

Despite increasingly coming under the control of the communists, the KDP initially still continued to attract members, with a Soviet document mentioning the party reaching 291,459 members by December 1946, while a resolution of the Second Congress from May 1947 stating that it had 273,665 members. The party was used by the WPK leadership to keep track on and diffuse anti-communists in North Korea.

KDP candidates were given 35 seats in the August 1948 elections, the newly-elected Supreme People's Assembly (SPA) later proclaimed the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) in September 1948. The party further declined during the Korean War, when many of its members sided with the government of South Korea and left the North when South Korean and United Nations forces retreated in 1950–1951. By the end of the war, its membership dropped to below 10,000. In February 1956, Choe Yong-gon was appointed as a vice chairman of the WPK, leaving Hong Ki-hwang, deputy chairman of the KDP since late 1945, to replace him as chairman of the KDP.

It was given eleven seats in the 1957 parliamentary elections. Hong and Chondoist Chongu Party leader Kim Tal-hyon were made a ministers without portfolios in September 1957, the last time non-Communist parties were given Cabinet positions. Hong and Kim were purged in 1958 as part of a purge of non-WPK parties, with Hong being accused of espionage and "having contacts with American imperialism". In 1959 and 1960 all of the party's offices were shut down by the government. It was subsequently reduced to four seats in 1962 and one in 1967 and 1972. In 1980 it adopted its current name, the Korean Social Democratic Party (KSDP). The 1990 elections saw the party awarded 51 seats. It had 52 seats following the 1998 elections and 50 after the 2009 elections. It retained the same number of seats in the 2014 elections.

Ideology

The Korean Democratic Party was initially founded by Cho Man-sik as a nationalist party that could potentially play a significant role in a coalition with the communists. After Cho's arrest, the party transitioned into a satellite party of the communists. During its Second Congress in 1947, the KDP formally incorporated the theory of "people's democratic revolution" into its program; while not explicitly mentioning socialism, the KDP declared it was unconditionally supportive of the political and social reforms done in North Korea. It also supported friendly ties with the Soviet Union and adopted democratic centralism to its structure.

Since its neutralization and effective demise by the WPK, the party has been used in North Korean propaganda targeting foreign sympathizers. In 1981, the party was renamed to the Korean Social Democratic Party. Because of the ostensible social democratic ideology, which is intelligible to foreigners, the Social Democratic Party is used in such propaganda much more than the other legal minor party, Chondoist Chongu Party. In the 1990s, the KSDP published periodical magazines in Korean and English. These magazines sought to simultaneously convince foreigners that North Korea has a multi-party system with independent parties, but also contradictorily that minor parties in North Korea support the Workers' Party of Korea without reservation.

Organization

The KSDP was a member of the Democratic Front for the Reunification of Korea from 1949 until the front's dissolution in 2024. It participated in the front alongside the other legal political parties and organisations of North Korea.

From 1982 until the early 2000s, the party distributed its party journal abroad in Korean and English translation. Contrary to its usual portrayal in official propaganda, for a brief time in the mid-to-late 1980s, the party's journal featured texts raising criticism of government policies. These included calls to give more support to people with disabilities or improve the petition system, as well as raising the potential benefits of allowing more than one candidate per election district and allowing voters to decide which would be elected. It is believed these statements may have been linked to a brief liberalization of North Korea's justice system that occurred around the same time. Since the mid-2000s, its party journal is only available online.

The party was headed by Pak Yong-il until his death in 2022. The previous chairman was Kim Yong-dae. , the party had more than 30,000 members.

International relations

The Korean Social Democratic Party had formed a sisterhood alliance of the now-defunct South Korea's Democratic Labor Party and Unified Progressive Party. The party also has contacts with South Korea's Progressive Party. The party issued an "anti-Japan joint statement" () with the Progressive Party in 2019. The party historically maintained communications with the now-defunct Japan Socialist Party.

Election results

North Korea

ElectionSeats+/–[1948](1948-north-korean-parliamentary-election)[1957](1957-north-korean-parliamentary-election)[1962](1962-north-korean-parliamentary-election)[1967](1967-north-korean-parliamentary-election)[1972](1972-north-korean-parliamentary-election)[1977](1977-north-korean-parliamentary-election)[1982](1982-north-korean-parliamentary-election)[1990](1990-north-korean-parliamentary-election)[1998](1998-north-korean-parliamentary-election)[2003](2003-north-korean-parliamentary-election)[2009](2009-north-korean-parliamentary-election)[2014](2014-north-korean-parliamentary-election)[2019](2019-north-korean-parliamentary-election)
24
7
3
2

South Korea

ElectionCandidateVotes%Outcome[1948](1948-south-korean-presidential-election)[1952](1952-south-korean-presidential-election)[1956](1956-south-korean-presidential-election)
Cho Man-sik105.08
Yi Yun-yong458,5836.43
34,9260.40
ElectionLeaderVotes%SeatsStatus[1948](1948-south-korean-constitutional-assembly-election)
Choe Yong-gon*Part of NARRKI*

Notes

References

References

  1. 광광 대대 극극 – 《우리 민족끼리》,Uriminzokkiri, 3 February 2023
  2. link. (3 February 2023)
  3. (2004). "The Europa World Year: Kazakhstan – Zimbabwe". Europa Publications.
  4. (26 November 2014). "Being a minor party in the North".
  5. [http://www.naenara.com.kp/en/great/political.php?2 Korean Social Democratic Party] {{webarchive. link. (9 July 2014 Naenara)
  6. Haruhiro Fukui (1985) ''Political parties of Asia and the Pacific'', Greenwood Press, pp. 652–653
  7. (2002). "North Korea Handbook". [[Yonhap News Agency]].
  8. Lankov, Andrei N.. (2001). "The Demise of Non-Communist Parties in North Korea (1945–1960)". Journal of Cold War Studies.
  9. {{Cite encyclopedia. link
  10. [[Dieter Nohlen]], Florian Grotz & Christof Hartmann (2001) ''Elections in Asia and the Pacific: A Data Handbook: South East Asia, East Asia, and the Pacific Volume 2'', p. 404 {{ISBN. 0-19-924959-8
  11. [http://www.ipu.org/parline-e/reports/arc/2085_90.htm Elections held in 1990] IPU
  12. [http://www.ipu.org/parline-e/reports/arc/2085_98.htm Elections held in 1998] IPU
  13. [http://www.ipu.org/parline-e/reports/arc/2085_09.htm Elections in 2009] IPU
  14. [http://www.ipu.org/parline-e/reports/2085_E.htm Last elections] IPU
  15. Tertitskiy, Fyodor. (26 November 2014). "Being a minor party in the North: In a totalitarian regime, what do N. Korea's other political blocs do?". [[NK News]].
  16. Weiser, Martin. (14 September 2015). "Voices from the Black Box: 1987, the Social Democratic Party, and Protection of Human Rights". SinoNK.
  17. (20 September 2022). link
  18. [http://www.kcna.co.jp/item/2007/200701/news01/31.htm#1 North Side Committee for Implementing June 15 Joint Declaration Meets] {{Webarchive. link. (26 September 2007, KCNA, 30 January 2007.)
  19. [https://web.archive.org/web/20070127094250/http://kp.china-embassy.org/chn/cxgk/cxzz/t287619.htm Korean politics] Chinese Embassy in North Korea {{in lang. zh
  20. (24 July 2012). "北, 통진당에 보낸 팩스가 진보신당에?".
  21. link. (17 July 2018)
  22. link. (14 August 2019)
  23. (1992). 조선사회민주당출판사
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