Prime Minister of South Korea

Prime Minister of
the Republic of Korea

Prime ministerial standard

Prime ministerial emblem
Incumbent
Hwang Kyo-ahn

since 18 June 2015
Style His/Her Excellency
Appointer President of South Korea with
the National Assembly's approval
Term length No fixed term
Inaugural holder Lee Beom-seok
Formation 31 July 1948
Website (English) pmo.go.kr/
(Korean) pmo.go.kr/
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Prime Minister of South Korea
Hangul 국무총리
Hanja 國務總理
Revised Romanization Gungmuchongni
McCune–Reischauer Kungmuch'ongni

The Prime Minister of the Republic of Korea is appointed by the South Korean President with the National Assembly's approval. The Prime Minister of South Korea is not required to be a member of the National Assembly.

The Prime Minister is the principal executive assistant to the President who is the actual head of government, not the prime minister.[1] The Prime Minister assists the President by supervising ministries, make recommendations for ministers, and is the vice chairman of the Cabinet. The Prime Minister is the first in the order of succession to discharge the duties of the office of the President as the Acting President should the president be unable to discharge her or his office. The last person to have served as Acting President was Goh Kun during the impeachment trial of President Roh Moo-hyun in 2004.

The position was created on 31 July 1948, two weeks before the government of South Korea was founded, and was held by Lee Beom-seok until 1950. The title was Chief Cabinet Minister from 1961 until 1963. The Prime Minister's Office is supported by two deputy ministers.[2]

A prime minister that has been appointed by the president but not yet confirmed by the National Assembly is known as the acting Prime Minister. The term may also be applied to a Prime Minister that has resigned but in the interim remains in office in a caretaker role. The Prime Minister becomes acting president if the president dies, resigns or is impeached.

On 27 April 2014, Prime Minister Chung Hongwon announced his desire to resign.[3] However, due to unsuccessful nominations, Chung remained in office until February 2015.

On 23 January 2015, President Park Geun-hye named Saenuri's Floor Leader Lee Wan-koo as the new prime minister. Lee was confirmed by the National Assembly as prime minister on 16 February 2015.[4] However, on April 20 of the same year, he offered his resignation to the President in the midst of a bribery scandal.[5]

Nomenclature

The Sino-Korean word gungmu (국무/國務) means "state affairs" and chongni (총리/總理) means "prime minister", "premier", or "chancellor," so the full title in Korean means literally "Prime Minister for State Affairs," but it is not used as official English title. The short title in Korean is just Chongni.

See also

References

External links

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