South Korea's Lee calls for overhaul of election management after flawed vote


An election official counts the ballots for local elections in Seoul, South Korea, June 3, 2026. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji

SEOUL, June 19 (Reuters) - ⁠South Korean President Lee Jae Myung said ⁠on Friday that the country's election management ‌system needed a major overhaul, calling a series of controversies involving the National Election Commission (NEC) including ballot-paper shortages "absurd."

Lee has ​ordered a probe into the ballot ⁠shortages that marred ⁠the June 3 local elections, saying prosecutors and ⁠police would ‌take part. The incident triggered public anger, protests questioning fairness and the ⁠resignation of the NEC chief.

"We must hurry ​to conduct ‌a thorough fact-finding investigation and carry out ⁠a full ​legal revision to reform the existing election management system at the level of dismantling it," Lee ⁠told a press briefing.

"If the ​ruling and opposition parties can agree, perhaps we should pursue even a one-point constitutional amendment concerning ⁠the NEC," he said.

The commission, a constitutionally independent body, had enjoyed "freedom close to indulgence" without proper oversight, Lee said, adding it should bear ​responsibility commensurate with its neutrality.

Lee ⁠also called for a stern response to any ​violence in the protests following ‌the elections, while saying peaceful ​rallies should be protected.

(Reporting by Kyu-seok Shim and Joyce LeeEditing by Ed Davies)

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