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South Korean politician (born 1965) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cho Kuk (Korean: 조국; born 6 April 1965[1]) is a South Korean politician who served as a member of the National Assembly of South Korea from May to December 2024, when he lost his seat following the Supreme Court of Korea's decision to uphold his two-year prison sentence for document falsification. He is the founder of the Rebuilding Korea Party.[2]
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Cho Kuk | |
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조국 | |
Leader of the Rebuilding Korea Party | |
In office 3 March 2024 – 12 December 2024 | |
Preceded by | Office established |
Succeeded by | Kim Sunmin (acting) |
Member of the National Assembly | |
In office 30 May 2024 – 12 December 2024 | |
Constituency | Proportional representation |
Minister of Justice | |
In office 9 September 2019 – 14 October 2019 | |
President | Moon Jae-in |
Preceded by | Park Sang-ki |
Succeeded by |
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Senior Presidential Secretary for Civil Affairs | |
In office 11 May 2017 – 26 July 2019 | |
President | Moon Jae-in |
Preceded by | Cho Dae-hwan |
Succeeded by | Kim Joe-won |
Personal details | |
Born | Seo District, Busan, South Korea | 6 April 1965
Political party | Independent[a] |
Other political affiliations |
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Spouse | Chung Kyung-shim |
Children | 2, including Cho Min |
Education | |
Occupation |
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Signature | |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 조국 |
Hanja | 曺國 |
Revised Romanization | Jo Guk |
McCune–Reischauer | Cho Kuk |
Cho previously served as a senior presidential aide for civil affairs under the cabinet of Moon Jae-in from May 2017 to July 2019. He was subsequently appointed as Minister of Justice, a position he held from September 2019 until his resignation on 14 October 2019 due to his involvement in a series of controversies, including allegations of corruption surrounding his family's business activities.[3]
In 2023, Cho was convicted of falsifying documents in connection with his children's college admissions and sentenced to two years in prison. In December 2024, the South Korea Supreme Court upheld the lower courts' ruling, effectively disqualifying him from his seat in the 22nd National Assembly of South Korea and barring him from running for office for five years.[4]
Cho was born in Seo District, Busan, South Korea[5][6] in 1965,[1] as the eldest son of the ex-Director of Ungdong Middle School[7] Cho Byun-hyun (died in 2013),[7] and his wife and the current Director of the institute, Park Jung-sook.[1][8][9]
He attended Gudeok Elementary School in Busan, then moved to Seoul and studied at Daesin Middle School. After he returned to Busan, he finished his secondary education at Hyekwang High School.[6] Cho earned bachelor's and master's degrees in law from Seoul National University,[6][5][1] and a doctoral degree (J.S.D) from the University of California, Berkeley in the United States.[6][1] He was also a visiting scholar at the University of Oxford[5] and University of Leeds[5] in the United Kingdom.
Cho was previously a lecturer in law at the University of Ulsan[5] from 1992[1] to 1994 and from 1999 to 2000,[10] then at Dongguk University[5] from 2000 to 2001,[10] and later at Seoul National University—where he had earned his bachelor's degree—from 2001 to 2004.[10] While at Seoul National University, he was promoted from lecturer to senior lecturer (2004–2009),[10] then to full professor in 2009.[10][6][11][12]
Cho showed interest in politics at the end of the 1980s, while studying at university.[1] During this time, he was already a member of the South Korean Socialist Workers' Alliance,[1][8] along with Rhyu Si-min and Eun Soo-mi. Cho was detained due to his activities, under breach of the National Security Act, and declared a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International.[1] Later, he criticised the National Security Act as a "barbaric law" in his book titled For the Freedom of Conscience and Ideology.[13]
Since the 2000s, Cho has been involved in various activities related to human rights and democracy. He was a member of the People's Solidarity for Participatory Democracy,[5][10] Committee of Determination of Punishment in Supreme Court,[14][5] National Human Rights Commission,[5][10] and the other various organisations.
Cho has never held any elected position,[1] even though the former Democratic Party (2008)[15] and its successor Democratic Unionist Party[16] suggested that he run for a position as member of the National Assembly in Bundang 2nd constituency.[1] There were also expectations that Cho would run for Superintendent of Education in Seoul during the local elections in 2014, but he declined.[17][1] He did not run for mayorship of Busan in 2018, despite public expectations.[1]
On 11 May 2017, the day after Moon Jae-in officially assumed the office of president, Cho was appointed Senior Secretary to the President for Civil Affairs.[18][1] He was one of several non-prosecutors appointed to the position.[18][19] He promised a clear investigation of the 2016 South Korean political scandal.[18] This was welcomed by the People's Party,[20] but also attacked by the Liberty Korea Party.[21][9]
On 31 December 2018, Cho attended the House Steering Committee of the National Assembly.[1] This "surprise" attendance was an issue in South Korean society, as such was not really done by former senior secretaries.[1] A source reported that this negatively affected the approval ratings of President Moon.[22]
Cho was replaced by Kim Joe-won on 26 July 2019.[23]
On 9 August 2019, Cho was nominated for the position of Minister of Justice[8][24] replacing Park Sang-ki, by President Moon. He quoted General Yi Sun-sin and promised political reform.[24] On 9 September, Cho was officially appointed Minister of Justice.[25] Cho subsequently resigned on 14 October, just 35 days after taking office due to a prosecution probe into various allegations surrounding his family.[26]
Cho is often regarded as liberal,[1] or a left-wing politician.[27][28][19] Regarding the abolition of the death penalty, he said, "I understood the national sentiment, but it should be replaced with life imprisonment."[29] He also mentioned that people should not argue with the criminality of abortion.[30]
For issues related to the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU), Cho announced that the government is not only for KCTU and impossible to satisfy their demands.[31]
Cho also claims that the government should induce major companies to lower their salary, to enforce equality between workers in major businesses and workers in smaller businesses.[32]
Cho called the declaration of martial law by President Yoon Suk Yeol on 3 December 2024 "illegal" and said it met conditions for the impeachment of Yoon and Kim Yong-hyun, the minister of national defense.[33]
Cho was frequently accused of plagiarism.[1][8][34] In July 2013, Song Pyung-in of The Dong-A Ilbo and a conservative commentator Byun Hee-jae had mentioned that Cho plagiarized several theses written by Japanese scholars during his studies at Seoul National University in 1989.[35][36][37] He replied that he underwent some problems with citations, although "unsure because it was long time ago", but then he apologized for it.
On 26 June 2015, Seoul National University answered for the issue: some issues were found, which are not too serious.[38] A few months after the incident, both commentators claimed again that Cho's plagiarism continued at University of California, Berkeley in 1997.[39][40] In response, Professor John Yoo said that no rechecking is required.[41] Berkeley also mentioned that there was no proof for the accusations.[42]
Cho faced another criticisms regarding tax delinquencies related to the Ungdong Institute.[1][8] It was reported that he and his family did not pay legal costs for 3 years.[1] He accepted that this was true, and made all necessary payments.[1][8]
In 2017, it was revealed that Cho Kuk and his family invested a total of approximately ₩1.4 billion, with a contract to invest an additional approximately ₩7 billion into a private equity fund, CO-LINK.[43] CO-LINK invested in a Korean company that is contracted in a multi-billion dollar computer network project in South Korea.[44]
On 27 August 2019, a search warrant was carried out by the prosecutor's office on suspect sites. On 29 August, the former wife of Cho's younger brother Cho Kwon, Cho Eun-hyang, who is listed as the owner or CEO of many of Cho Kuk's family businesses and properties, was denied boarding on an international flight out of Gimhae International Airport.[45] Despite two full days of news reports, she claimed she was not aware of the flight ban placed on her.[45] Furthermore, three other business associates of Cho Kuk's family, including a Cho Kuk relative, had already left the country before the ban was officially placed on them.
Kim Gyung-yul and his team of accountants and economic analysts of People's Solidarity for Participatory Democracy came to a conclusion that this is a crime involving political power.[46]
On 31 October 2019, Cho Kuk's younger brother, Cho Kwon, was arrested on charges of embezzlement and bribery.[47] These charges were later dropped.[48]
A scandals came from his pending nomination as the Minister of Justice, mainly concerning Cho Kuk's falsification of academic achievements of his daughter, Cho Min.
Cho Min, and her parents Cho Kuk and Chung Kyung-sim, have been accused of falsifying her academic achievements to gain admission into prestigious universities and the medical school. Falsified academic achievements include her research in genetics and pathology, one which has since been retracted for violation of ethical guidelines.[49] A senior association of medical experts in South Korea condemned the paper as one of the most serious cases of academic misconduct in South Korean history and compared it to the Hwang Woo-suk scandal.[50]
On 31 December 2019, Cho was indicted on 12 charges over his role in his children's college admissions, including for bribery and corruption, but was not detained. In January 2020, Cho was removed from his teaching position at Seoul National University. In February 2023, Cho was sentenced to two years prison for falsely submitting documents attesting that his son had completed an internship and forging his daughter's academic credentials. In June 2023, Seoul National University expelled him from their faculty of law.[51]
On 12 December 2024, Cho's conviction was upheld by the Supreme Court of Korea, paving the way for his losing his seat in the National Assembly and his eligibility to run in presidential elections until 2029.[52] Cho reported to prison on 16 December,[53] after he successfully requested prosecutors to allow him to address official duties and the succession of Rebuilding Korea's leadership.[54]
On 10 September 2019, shortly after Cho Kuk's nomination hearing, his wife, Chung Kyung-sim, was officially indicted for forgery of a document by the prosecutor's office. When asked what should happen should his wife face charges, Cho replied that she should be held accountable to the fullest extent of the law. He did not add that he would withdraw or resign from the nomination.[55]
On 24 October[56] Chung Kyung-sim was charged on 15 counts, including obstruction of business, insider trading, embezzlement, and withholding evidence. On 23 December 2020, she was found guilty on 11 charges, and sentenced to four years in prison and a total of ₩638 million (equivalent to around $500,000 US) in fines and "unlawful gains".[57] The embezzlement charges were dismissed.[58] The sentence was upheld by the supreme court on 27 January 2022.[59]
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