President Moon Jae-in appointed senior justice Lee Jin-sung as the new head of the Constitutional Court on Friday, ending a 10-month leadership void at the top of the judiciary.
Lee, former head of the high court in Gwangju, was named in a ceremony in Cheong Wa Dae on Friday, which was held after the National Assembly approved Lee‘s appointment in a 254-18 vote.
Lee became the latest member of the court’s 9-member panel, Cheong Wa Dae officials said. He was designated a new Constitutional Court justice on Oct. 18.
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Lee Jin-sung (Yonhap) |
The parliamentary approval came more than two months after it voted down Moon‘s first choice for the chief justice position amid disputes over the earlier nominee’s ideological orientation.
Of the 276 lawmakers present for the poll, 254 voted for him and 18 against, with one abstention and three invalid ballots.
The 61-year-old justice has been part of the court‘s nine-member bench since September 2012. With no legal specification, a dispute lingers over whether Lee should begin a fresh six-year term as the court chief or serve in the post until his current six-year term ends next year.
Lee has said that his term as the chief may end next year unless there is a clear statutory definition.
With his personal life and judicial career largely unblemished, Lee passed smoothly through the parliamentary confirmation hearing Wednesday.
During the hearing, Lee vowed to safeguard citizens’ constitutional rights, agreed with the labeling of North Korea as the “main enemy” and voiced thinly veiled support for those who reject mandatory military service based on their religious belief.
Addressing the abortion issue, he noted the need to “strike a balance between a fetus‘ right and a pregnant woman’s right to self-determination.”
Lee, largely seen as conservative, joined the court on the recommendation of former Supreme Court Chief Justice Yang Sung-tae who was picked by former President Lee Myung-bak.
From news report (
khnews@heraldcorp.com)