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Progressive Party (South Korea, 1956)

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Progressive Party
진보당
LeaderCho Pong-am
General SecretaryYun Kil-chung
FoundedJanuary 26, 1956 (1956-01-26) (de facto)
November 10, 1956 (1956-11-10) (de jure)
DissolvedFebruary 25, 1958 (1958-02-25)
HeadquartersJongro 2-ga, Jongro-gu, South Korea
Membership (1956)around 1,500[1]
Ideology
Political positionCentre-left
Progressive Party
Hangul
진보당
Hanja
進步黨
Revised RomanizationJinbodang
McCune–ReischauerChinbodang

Progressive Party (Korean진보당; Hanja進步黨; RRJinbodang; MRChinbodang) was a short-lived moderate left political party founded after the Korean War in South Korea under the leadership of Cho Bong-am.[3] It was a major political force from 1956 to 1958, and fell apart in 1959.

History

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The Progressive Party was founded in the aftermath of the Korean War under Cho's leadership. Cho and his followers were able to build a wide coalition with the country's leftist forces. Cho also successfully created coalitions with right-wing forces opposed to Syngman Rhee's dictatorship. The party's founding and moderate success in Korea's hostile political environment is considered a large result of Bong-am's personal charisma. The Progressive Party advocated peaceful unification with North Korea, through strengthening the country's democratic forces and winning in a unified Korean election. Cho called for both anti-communist and anti-authoritarian politics, as well as advocating for social welfare policies for the peasants and urban poor.[4]

In the 1956 election, Cho ran against Rhee, the anti-communist strongman president. Cho lost with 30% of the vote, which exceeded expectations. Following the election, the Progressive Party broke apart due to factionalism.[4]

Political position

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The Progressive Party officially advocated social democracy, but was regarded as a liberal party.[5] In fact, scholars in South Korea evaluated that the Progressive Party and Cho Bong-am were not German "social democracy" but an American "progressive liberalism" route, which was also reported by The Chosun Ilbo, South Korea's right-wing conservative journalist. (At that time, in South Korean politics, the term "liberal" was often used by right-wing conservative and Minjudangkye forces in a similar sense to "anti-communist".)[6]

Cho, who led the party, proposed a policy to appease North Korea, affecting the Sunshine Policy of modern South Korean liberals. At the same time, however, Cho was a strong anti-communist and a believer in liberal democracy.[7]

References

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  1. ^ 徐·曺 兩氏 對立去益深刻 [The conflict between Seo and Jo is more intensifying]. The Kyung Hyang Press (in Chinese). 1956-08-12. Retrieved 2015-01-17 – via Naver.
  2. ^ Lawrence S. Kaplan, ed. (2004). NATO Divided, NATO United: The Evolution of an Alliance. Praeger. p. 26. ISBN 9780275983772. ... And when the Korean War wound down two years later, the U.S. forces became a ready target for a coalition of the liberal Progressive Party, the Communist Party, and the National Preservation Party that had won an impressive victory in ...
  3. ^ Kim, Yunjong (2016). The Failure of Socialism in South Korea: 1945 - 2007. New York: Routledge. p. 54.
  4. ^ a b Han, Sungjoo (1974). The Failure of Democracy in South Korea. University of California Press. p. 79.
  5. ^ Lawrence S. Kaplan, ed. (2004). NATO Divided, NATO United: The Evolution of an Alliance. Praeger. p. 26. ... And when the Korean War wound down two years later, the U.S. forces became a ready target for a coalition of the liberal Progressive Party, the Communist Party, and the National Preservation Party that had won an impressive victory in ...
  6. ^ 농지개혁 주도한 조봉암은 左右 통합 추진한 실용주의자 [Cho Bong-am, who led the farmland reform, was a pragmatist who pursued the integration of the left and right]. The Chosun Ilbo. 25 April 2019. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
  7. ^ Sung-Wook Nam; Sang-Woo Rhee; Myongsob Kim; Young-Ho Kim; Yong-Sub Han; Young-Soon Chung; Seong-Ok Yoo, eds. (2018). South Korea's 70-Year Endeavor for Foreign Policy, National Defense, and Unification. Springer. p. 77. ISBN 9789811319907. Cho Bong-Am also said, "When democratic spirit is translated into action, we can realize unification of Korea based on liberal democracy and enjoy freedom and independence permanently." See Cho Bong-Am, Our Immediate Tasks [in Korean] ...