Choi Sang-mok

Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Economy and Finance of South Korea since 2023 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Choi Sang-mok

Choi Sang-mok (Korean: 최상목, born 7 June 1963) is a South Korean politician who served as the acting president and acting prime minister of South Korea from 2024, following the impeachment of Han Duck-soo,[1] until 2025, when Han was acquitted and had both of his positions reinstated. Choi has also served as the deputy prime minister and minister of Economy and Finance since December 2023.

Quick Facts President of South Korea, President ...
Choi Sang-mok
최상목
Choi in 2024
President of South Korea
Acting
27 December 2024  24 March 2025
PresidentYoon Suk Yeol[a]
Prime MinisterHimself (acting)
Preceded byHan Duck-soo
Succeeded byHan Duck-soo
Prime Minister of South Korea
Acting
27 December 2024  24 March 2025
President
  • Yoon Suk Yeol
  • Himself (acting)
Preceded byHan Duck-soo
Succeeded byHan Duck-soo
Deputy Prime Minister and
Minister of Economy and Finance
Assumed office
29 December 2023
Prime MinisterHan Duck-soo
Himself (acting)
Preceded byChoo Kyung-ho
Additional offices
Senior Secretary for Economic Affairs
In office
10 May 2022  3 December 2023
PresidentYoon Suk Yeol
Preceded byPark Won-ju
Succeeded byPark Choon-seop
Vice Minister of Strategy and Finance
In office
18 January 2016  31 May 2017
Prime MinisterHwang Kyo-ahn
Yoo Il-ho (acting)
MinisterYoo Il-ho
Secretary for Economic Affairs and Finance
In office
September 2014  January 2016
Prime MinisterChung Hong-won
Lee Wan-koo
Hwang Kyo-ahn
Personal details
Born (1963-06-07) 7 June 1963 (age 61)
Seoul, South Korea
Political partyIndependent
EducationSeoul National University (LLB, MPA)
Cornell University (PhD)
Military service
Allegiance South Korea
Branch/service Republic of Korea Army
Korean name
Hangul
최상목
Hanja
崔相穆
Revised RomanizationChoe Sangmok
McCune–ReischauerCh'oe Sangmok
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Early life and education

Choi was born on 7 June 1963 in Seoul. After graduating from Osan High School in Seoul (72nd), he entered the Department of Law at Seoul National University College of Law (Class of 82) in 1982, chose the Department of Law in his second year,[2] and passed the 29th Public Administration Examination in 1985.[3]

Career

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Perspective

Early career

Choi enlisted in the Army on 13 October 1986 after being adjudicated as a six-month National Guard, as he was the only male heir (독자, 獨子) of his father. He served as an administrative soldier (general administrative specialty) in the Army Headquarters Command Office, and was demobilized as a private on 12 April 1987.[4]

Since then, he served as an official of the Ministry of Economic Affairs,[when?] serving as the Director of the Securities System Division of the Ministry of Finance and Economy (Level 3), the Director of the Financial Policy Division / the Director of the Public Funds Management Committee of the Financial Services Commission (Level 2), the Director of the Policy Coordination Bureau of the Ministry of Strategy and Finance,[when?] the Director of the Economic Policy Bureau, and the Director of the Policy Cooperation Office of the Ministry of Strategy and Finance (Level 1). In June 1996, he received his PhD in economics from Cornell University, specializing in macroeconomics.[5]

Vice Minister (2014–2017)

From October 2013 to July 2014, he served as Vice Prime Minister for Economic Affairs and Policy Advisor to the Minister of Strategy and Finance, and in July 2014, he served as Secretary for Economy and Finance[3] in the Office of the Chief Economic Officer of the Presidential Secretariat. He returned to the Ministry of Finance and was promoted to vice minister and served as the first vice minister of the Ministry of Strategy and Finance until May 2017, when the Moon Jae-in government took office.

Private career (2019–2020)

On 22 March 2019, he was appointed as an outside director of Ildong Holdings, and as of 12 March 2020, he was appointed as an outside director of Shinhan Securities.[6]

As of 24 March 2020, he was appointed as the 26th president of the Agricultural Cooperative College.[5]

Deputy Premiership (2022–present)

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Choi with South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Philippine President Bongbong Marcos in Manila on 7 October 2024

In March 2022, after Yoon Suk-yeol was elected president, he participated in the 20th Presidential Transition Committee as a secretary of the Economy 1 Division. When he served as the secretary of the transition committee, he attracted attention[clarification needed] as a candidate for the first vice prime minister and minister of economy and finance of the Yoon Suk-yeol government and chairman of the Financial Services Commission along with Rep. Choo Kyung-ho and former head of the Office of State Affairs Coordination. However, he was appointed to the post of Chief Economic Secretary in the Office of the President.[3]

Minister of Economy and Finance

After being appointed deputy prime minister and minister of strategy and finance by President Yoon Suk Yeol, he told a news conference that strengthening efforts to stabilize people's livelihoods would be the most important priority under his leadership.[7] He was one of Yoon's conservative loyalists, but openly opposed Yoon's martial law plan.[2]

Acting presidency and premiership (2024–2025)

Upon the impeachment of Prime Minister of South Korea and concurrent acting president Han Duck-soo on 27 December 2024, he became both acting president and acting prime minister of South Korea.[8]

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Choi meets United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken on 6 January 2025 in Seoul

The crash of Jeju Air Flight 2216, the deadliest plane crash to occur on South Korean soil, occurred only two days into Choi's acting presidency. One of his first acts was to formally declare Muan County, where the disaster occurred, as a special disaster zone.[9] He also ordered an emergency review of South Korea's aircraft operation systems.[10]

On 31 December 2024, Choi appointed Chung Kyesun and Cho Hanchang to the Constitutional Court of Korea as part of efforts to fill vacancies in the court, an issue that contributed to Han's impeachment when he refused to fill three vacancies in the chamber.[11][12] The appointments were criticised by both the ruling People Power Party, which opposed him making any appointments to the court at all, and the opposition Democratic Party (DPK), which cited his refusal to appoint a third nominee, Ma Eun-hyuk, which Choi based on the lack of bipartisan support for the latter's nomination.[13] The appointments also led to a mass resignation of senior officials associated with impeached president Yoon Suk Yeol in the presidential office, which said that the move "goes beyond the authorities of an interim leader". However, Choi rejected the resignations.[14] At the same time, Choi vetoed two special counsel bills that sought to investigate Yoon Suk Yeol and his wife Kim Keon-hee over his martial law declaration and charges of corruption.[15] He also vetoed a revised version of the bill in January 2025, citing lack of bipartisan consensus,[16] and another bill in March that sought to investigate Yoon over an influence-peddling scandal during a parliamentary by-election in 2022.[17]

Choi was also criticised over his role in the failed attempt to arrest Yoon Suk Yeol at his residence on 3 January 2025, with the DPK accusing him of obstructing Yoon's arrest by allowing the Presidential Security Service to block the Corruption Investigation Office for High-ranking Officials from implementing its arrest warrant on Yoon.[18]

On 6 February, Choi was questioned by the National Assembly over a memorandum he received from Yoon Suk Yeol ordering the creation of a budget for an emergency legislative body which was to have been created during martial law.[19]

On 27 February, the Constitutional Court ruled that acting Choi's decision to withhold Ma Eun-hyuk's appointment to the Constitutional Court violated the National Assembly's right to elect a justice to the court but dismissed a petition to have Ma appointed immediately.[20]

On 18 March, Choi vetoed a bill that would have overhauled decision-making processes at the Korea Communications Commission, citing "significant unconstitutional elements" and concerns over the stability of the KCC’s operations.[21]

On 21 March, the DPK and four other opposition parties submitted a motion in the National Assembly to impeach Choi, citing his refusal to appoint justices to the Constitutional Court.[22] The petitioners also charged Choi with abetting the Yoon's martial law declaration in December 2024, failing to appoint a National Assembly-backed independent prosecutor to look into possible insurrection by Yoon despite the legislature passing a resolution to do so,[23] and failing to act on the application of a nominee to the Supreme Court of Korea.[22]

Following the overturning of Han Duck-soo's impeachment by the Constitutional Court on 24 March, Choi was relieved of his duties as acting president and prime minister.[24]

See also

Notes

  1. Yoon's powers and duties are suspended due to his impeachment and pending trial; Choi succeeded Han, who had originally assumed those powers and duties as acting president, due to Han's own impeachment.

References

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