Jung Chung-rae (Korean: 정청래, born 18 May 1965) is a South Korean politician serving as a member of the National Assembly.
Jung Chung-rae | |
---|---|
정청래 | |
Member of the National Assembly | |
Assumed office May 2020 | |
Constituency | Mapo B (Seoul) |
In office May 2004 – May 2008 | |
In office May 2012 – May 2016 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Geumsan County, South Chungcheong Province, South Korea | 18 May 1965
Political party | Democratic |
Alma mater | |
Biography
editJung was born on May 18, 1965, the 10th youngest of 10 children in Seokmak-ri, Jinsan-myeon, Geumsan-gun, Chungcheongnam-do, as a 17th-generation descendant of the Hadong Jung clan.
While a fourth-year industrial engineering student at Konkuk University, Chung Cheong-rae served as the eastern district chairman of the KPA's “Juche Special Committee” and photocopied and distributed six copies of the book “Tradition of the Juche Revolution,” which contained information about Kim Il Sung's Juche ideas, to the cadres of Konkuk University's student government (in violation of the National Security Law).
On September 23, 1988, the Mapo Police Station in Seoul detained Jung on charges of violating the National Security Act and violating the Law on Assembly and Demonstration.[1] In response to the government's December 20, 1988 amnesty reinstatement, the charges were dropped on December 21, 1988 by the Seoul District Public Prosecutor's Office.
However, in October 1989, he was arrested by the police for a terrorist act in which he broke into the U.S. embassy residence and detonated an improvised bomb. [2] He was arrested and indicted in November 1989.
He was sentenced to 4 years in prison and 2 years of suspension of his license on charges of leading the occupation of the U.S. Embassy residence in Jeong-dong, Seoul in 1989 and throwing an improvised bomb, violating the Assembly and Demonstration Act and the Security Act, violating the National Security Act (miscellaneous), violating the Assembly and Demonstration Act, obstructing special official duties resulting in injury, preparing for arson of an existing building, violating the Act on the Punishment of Acts of Violence, etc., violating the Act on the Control of Firearms, Swords, Explosives, etc., and violating the Act on the Punishment of the Use of Molotov Cocktails, etc.[3]
Due to his experience in anti-American protest movements, Chung was excluded from the State Department's October 2013 State of the Union inspection because he was not granted a visa to travel to the United States.[4] Chung was also excluded from the State of the Union inspection.
Political career
editIn the early 1990s, he founded and operated a guiding school in Mapo-gu, Seoul, and was recruited by the National Congress for New Politics, where he began his political activities.
In 2007, along with Lee Jae-myung, he led the establishment of People in Touch with Jung Dong-young, a support group for Jung,[12] and served four terms (17th, 19th, 21st, and 22nd) as a member of the National Assembly, representing Mapo B, Seoul.
During the 17th National Assembly, he led an occupation of the National Assembly headquarters to demand the repeal of the National Security Act.
On March 10, 2016, he was not nominated by the Democratic Party of Korea for the 20th general election due to various controversies and was cut along with several other active members of the party.[5] He said that he respected the party's decision and would not defect, but would help the party in various ways to win the general election. He recommended Son Hye-won, the party's public relations chairperson, for his district, and she was selected as the Democratic Party of Korea's candidate for the 20th general election in Mapo-gu.
In the 2020 South Korean legislative election, he was nominated as the Democratic Party of Korea's candidate for Mapo-gu and won a third term, defeating Kim Sung-dong of the People Power Party with 53.75% of the vote.
In August 2022, he was elected as a senior member of the Democratic Party of Korea.
In the 2024 South Korean legislative election, he ran for the same district and won a fourth term with 52.44% of the vote, defeating Ham Un-kyung of the People Power Party.
In the 22nd National Assembly, he was elected chairman of the Judiciary Committee for the first half of the year.
Controversy
editOn May 4, 2018, at 8:45 p.m., Jung hit the front bumper of a parked car while reversing in the second-floor basement parking lot of a media building in Deunggye-ro, Jung-gu, Seoul, but fled without leaving any personal information. The car's front bumper and radiator grille were damaged in the accident. Jung was fined for fleeing the scene without leaving his contact information, even though he hit another car while parked.[6]
References
edit- ^ ""'주체사상'소개 책 돌린 대학생 국가보안법 구속"" (in Korean). Retrieved 4 December 2024.
- ^ "https://newslibrary.naver.com/viewer/index.naver?articleId=1989101300209201003&editNo=2&printCount=1&publishDate=1989-10-13&officeId=00020&pageNo=1&printNo=20933&publishType=00020" (in Korean). Retrieved 4 December 2024.
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- ^ "정청래 의원, 미국 대사관저에 사재폭탄 던지다 '징역 6년 선고?'". 14 May 2015. Retrieved 4 December 2024.
- ^ ""미국, `국정감사' 정청래 의원 비자발급 거부"" (in Korean). 22 October 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2024.
- ^ "더민주, 막말 정청래 등 현역 5명 공천 배제…3선 최규성·윤후덕도 탈락" (in Korean). Retrieved 4 December 2024.
- ^ "정청래 전 의원, 주차된 차 들이받고 그냥 자리 떴다가 범칙금" (in Korean). Retrieved 4 December 2024.