Why South Korea's election isn't leading to Japan bashing this time

Yoon has reason to keep up diplomatic momentum, and views on Tokyo have moderated

20240429N green opinion protesters

South Korean demonstrators hold up green onions to protest against high food prices under President Yoon Suk Yeol. (Yonhap via Kyodo) 

HIROSHI MINEGISHI, Nikkei senior staff writer

TOKYO -- The stinging defeat suffered by South Korea's ruling conservative People Power Party (PPP) in the April 10 general election says something about the ups and downs of the country's politics. But relations with Japan -- a topic fraught with difficulty -- weren't a factor in this outcome.

Go Seon-gyu, a professor at Fukushima College in Japan and an expert in South Korean elections, made a convincing case for the biggest factor behind the loss.

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