South Korean President Park Geun-hye saw her approval rating continue
to fall despite her second apology to the public last week over a
scandal involving her longtime confidante and former aides, a
local
pollster survey showed on Monday.
Support for Park was 11.5 percent last week, down 7.5 percentage
points from the previous week, according to a Realmeter poll of 2,528
adults conducted from Monday to Friday.
The number was the lowest for any South Korean president, keeping a
downward trend for five weeks in a row since the scandal surrounding
Choi Soon-sil, the president's decades-long friend suspected of
intervening in state affairs, came into focus last month.
According to a Gallup Korea survey released on Friday, Park's support
scores dropped to 5 percent, lower than any other predecessors.
Traditional support base for Park rapidly alienated from the
embattled president, with an approval rating in the North Gyeongsang
province tumbling 20.1 percentage points compared with a week ago, the
Realmeter survey showed. The province is regarded as a political home
turf for Park and the ruling Saenuri Party.
Support for Park among those in their 50s plunged 14.3 percentage
points, with an approval rating among supporters in this range for the
ruling party sliding 14.2 percentage points.
However, President Park had a higher approval rating from those in
their 60s and older following her second public apology and the
acceptance of investigation by prosecutors into herself "if necessary"
on Friday.
Daily support scores for the president increased from 23.5 percent on
Thursday to 2.4 percent on Friday among voters aged 60 or higher.
In the highly-charged address to the nation, President Park admitted
that she lowered her guard toward Choi, who the president said had stood
with her during the toughest times.
Park's toughest times indicate the assassinations of her mother in
1974 and then her father, military strongman Park Chung-hee killed in
1979 by one of his closest aides. Park's friendship with Choi dates back
to the mid-1970s.
Nov 7, 2016
3:57 PM
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