Kim Jin-pyo (Korean: 김진표; Hanja: 金振杓; born 4 May 1947) is a South Korean politician who previously served as a government minister under two liberal Presidents Kim Dae-jung and Roh Moo-hyun and has represented Suwon at the National Assembly since 2004. He has dedicated his career in public service as a public servant for 30 years[1] and then as government minister and a parliamentarian. He belongs to the more conservative wing of the liberal Democratic Party.[2][3][4]
Pre-Minister career
After passing the state exam in 1974, he began his career as a public servant at one of regional offices of National Tax Service.[3] Apart from working for Deputy Prime MinisterRha Woong-bae as his chief of staff for five months in 1996, he continued working on tax. He was part of a small task-force to prepare "real-name financial system" and one of nine people apart from then-President Kim Young-sam who knew about this before it was announced by the president.[5]
In 2002 then-President-elect Roh Moo-hyun appointed him as vice chair of his transition team[3] praising him as "the most capable public servant I have ever met."[8]
In 2007 he became the chair of Policy Planning Committee of his party, Uri Party, and its succeeding party, United New Democratic Party. From 2008 to 2010 he served as a member of his party's Supreme Council.
In 2011 he was elected as the floor leader of this party which he continued to serve in succeeding party till 2012.
In the 2014 election, he resigned from the post of three-term parliamentarian to run as his party's candidate for Gyeonggi Governor but lost to Nam Kyung-pil from opposition party.
In 2015 he became a member of advisory committee to then-party leader Moon Jae-in. He organised the "policy exposition" of his party - the first of its kind in South Korean history.[11]
In 2017 Kim joined Moon Jae-in's second presidential campaign in 2017 as the chair of its jobs committee.[3]
Upon the beginning of Moon Jae-in's presidency, Kim was appointed as the chair of State Affairs Planning Advisory Committee (Korean: 국정기획자문위원회), Moon's de facto transition team, as Moon began his presidency without having one. The Committee produced detailed blueprint of Moon's 5-year administration with 100 policy tasks based on Moon's campaign promises.[12][13]
Kim Jin-pyo was elected as the Speaker of the National Assembly to be occupied by the Democratic Party of Korea.[14]
He belongs to the most conservative faction of Democratic Party of Korea.[18] However, he was elected as the Speaker of the National Assembly with the support of the majority of DPK members.[14] As the speaker of the National Assembly, he was criticized by various members of the party for putting the brakes on various policies promoted by the party without agreement with the party.[19] He was rated more conservative than the center-rightBareun Party in a South Korean media survey.[20]
He supports economic liberalism including real estate deregulation.[21] He argued against the government's position that the sale price was disclosed in order to prevent the skyrocketing house price in the past, and argued that the disclosure of the sale price was socialism.[22][23]
He also takes a socially conservative stance. He introduced the 'homosexuality healing movement' as one of the solutions to the low birth rate.[24] He has strong opposition to homosexuality and same-sex marriage. In the past, he made remarks such as, "The religious world should promote childbirth, oppose abortion, and campaign against homosexuality and same-sex marriage in accordance with God's spirit of creation."[25] Because of this position, some organizations have received claims that they "condemn hate against LGBTI people."[26]
He has a very close relationship with the church and opposes taxing religious people. He said at a religious event in the past, "I think that only through theocracy can we regain the trust of the people and play the role of check and balance as an opposition party."[27] It was pointed out that this remark violated the separation of church and state.[28]
He influenced the withdrawal of the operating room CCTV installation, which is considered one of the reform legislation.[29] He claimed to be in favor, but suddenly took a stance against it.[30] Regarding this, it was criticized by several members of the party as "a breach of trust that betrays the will of sovereignty." According to an opinion poll, about 80% of Koreans supported the installation of CCTV in operating rooms.[31]
^He is practically a member of the Democratic Party of Korea, but under South Korean law, the Speaker of the National Assembly cannot have party affiliation.