Na Kyung-won

South Korean judge and politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Na Kyung-won

Na Kyung-won (Korean: 나경원, born 6 December 1963) is a South Korean judge and politician. She is a member of the conservative People Power Party. She has been a member of the National Assembly since 2004. From December 2018 to December 2019 she was the parliamentary leader of the Liberty Korea Party, the first woman to hold the position.[3]

Quick Facts The Honourable, Member of the National Assembly ...
Na Kyung-won
나경원
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Member of the National Assembly
Assumed office
30 May 2024[1]
Preceded byLee Soo-jin
ConstituencySeoul Dongjak B
In office
31 July 2014  29 May 2020
Preceded byChung Mong-joon
Succeeded byLee Soo-jin
ConstituencySeoul Dongjak B
In office
30 May 2008  28 September 2011
Preceded byPark Seong-beom
Succeeded byJeong Ho-jun
ConstituencySeoul Jung
In office
30 May 2004  29 May 2008
ConstituencyProportional representation
Personal details
Born (1963-12-06) 6 December 1963 (age 61)
Seoul, South Korea
NationalityKorean
Political partyPeople Power
Other political
affiliations
GNP/LKP
Alma materSeoul National University
ReligionCatholicism[2]
SignatureThumb
Korean name
Hangul
나경원
Hanja
羅卿瑗
Revised RomanizationNa Gyeongwon
McCune–ReischauerNa Kyŏngwŏn
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Early life and education

Na was born on December 6, 1963, in Seoul, South Korea. She graduated from Seoul National University with a bachelor's and a master's degree in law, and completed a doctoral program in international law at the same university.[4]

Career

Summarize
Perspective

In 1995, Na became a judge for administrative courts of South Korea.[4] She started her political career as a special aide for women's affairs to Lee Hoi-chang for the 2002 presidential election.[5][6] She was one of two candidates of the October 2011 Seoul mayoral by-election after Oh Se-hoon resigned his position as mayor, but lost the election to Park Won-soon.[7]

Na did not run in the 2012 legislative election due to allegations that her husband Kim Jae-ho was involved in a clandestine deal with a prosecutor from the Supreme Prosecutors' Office.[8] She subsequently ran as a candidate for Dongjak B in a July 2014 by-election, and beat the Justice Party's Roh Hoe-chan by 929 votes.[9]

Outside of politics, Na began working in sports in 2005. She became the president of Special Olympics Korea in 2005 and the Korean Wheelchair Rugby Association in 2006. In 2009, Na was selected to the Korean Paralympic Committee and elected vice president of the KPC in 2013. Also in 2013, Na was named onto the International Paralympic Committee[4] and reelected in 2017.[10]

In December 2018, Na was elected parliamentary floor leader of the main opposition party.,[3] the first woman in the country to hold this position.[11] In February 2019, she warned that if the US could not get North Korea to denuclearize, Seoul would probably order more nuclear weaponry to level up to its northern counterpart.[12]

She lost her Dongjak B seat to Lee Soo-jin in the 2020 legislative election. On 13 January 2021, she announced to run for Mayor of Seoul in the 2021 South Korean by-elections but lost to Oh Se-hoon in the primaries.[13]

In 2025, Na declared her candidacy for the 2025 South Korean presidential election,[14] but lost in the primaries held by the People Power Party.[15]

Controversies

On September 26, 2011, Na Kyung-won visited a facility related to the severely disabled and was criticized socially for taking off the clothes of a severely disabled teenager and bathing naked in front of reporters.[16][unreliable source?] Human rights groups for the disabled also criticized Na Kyung-won.[17]

On 15 April 2019, during a protest, progressive college students occupied the office of Na Kyung-won.[18]

In September 2019, it was reported by local media that Na's son had allegedly received preferential treatment while in high school after he was listed as the first author in a paper's research summary. The paper was subsequently presented at a medical engineering conference at Seoul National University. Na stated that she finds the allegations "regrettable" and that her son "conducted the experiments himself and wrote about it."[19]

Personal life

Na Kyung-won is married to judge Kim Jae-ho and they have two children. Their daughter has Down syndrome.[20]

References

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