South Korea’s People Power Party is moving to stabilize its nomination process amid escalating friction with the judiciary, tapping veteran lawmaker Park Deok-heum to lead its key screening committee. Party leader Jang Dong-hyeok announced the nomination on April 1, signaling an intent to restore internal order whereas pushing back against recent court rulings that have overturned party disqualifications.
Park, a four-term representative from the Chungbuk region, was selected for his standing within the party. Jang told reporters at the National Assembly that he sought a senior figure with high trust among colleagues to manage the sensitive task of candidate selection. The appointment is scheduled for formal approval during the party’s supreme council meeting on April 2.
The leadership change comes with a structural shift. Jang confirmed that the party will separate its local election nomination committee from the committee handling parliamentary by-elections. Each body will be staffed with distinct members, a move designed to streamline operations and isolate potential conflicts as multiple electoral cycles converge.
Beyond internal restructuring, the party is confronting a contentious relationship with the Seoul Southern District Court. Jang expressed frustration that major party disputes are consistently assigned to Civil Division 51 of that court. He argued that candidate selection involves political judgment and that the judiciary is overstepping by intervening too deeply in party affairs.
The tension stems from a series of recent injunctions granted by the court. Judges have suspended the party’s disqualification of several high-profile figures, including Chungbuk Governor Kim Young-hwan and Representative Bae Hyun-jin, a close ally of former leader Han Dong-hoon. Cases involving former chief Kim Jong-hyeok and Daegu mayoral candidate Joo Ho-young are likewise tied to the same judicial division, complicating the party’s strategy to enforce discipline.
What is the goal of splitting the nomination committees?
By separating the local election process from parliamentary by-elections, the party aims to prevent bottlenecks and reduce conflicts of interest. Distinct committees allow for specialized focus on different types of races, potentially speeding up decisions and limiting the scope of any single controversy.

Why is the party criticizing the Seoul Southern District Court?
Party leadership argues that candidate selection is an internal political decision that should not be subject to extensive judicial review. Recent rulings blocking disqualifications have undermined the party’s authority, leading to claims that the court is interfering in political strategy rather than purely legal matters.
What happens if the court continues to overturn party decisions?
Continued legal defeats could weaken the leadership’s control over the candidate pool, forcing the party to accept nominees they initially rejected. This may lead to further internal fragmentation or prompt the party to seek legislative changes to clarify the boundaries of judicial intervention in nomination processes.
As the supreme council prepares to vote on Park’s appointment, the real test will be whether a new committee chair can navigate the legal constraints while maintaining party discipline. How much autonomy should a political party retain when its internal decisions face consistent judicial review?





