Seoul Mayor Candidate Preference … Ahn 24.1%, Park Young-sun 15.3%, Oh Se-hun 9.5%



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Ahn Chul-soo, Chairman of the National Assembly Party.  Central photo

Ahn Chul-soo, Chairman of the National Assembly Party. Central photo

In a poll on the preferences of Seoul mayoral candidates, a public opinion poll found that Ahn Chul-soo, the representative of the National Assembly Party, ranked first with a support of 24.1%.

Ipsos, a polling company, asked 801 people over the age of 18 who lived in Seoul from the 31st to the 1st of last month about the preferences of the Seoul mayoral candidates, with CEO Ahn ranking first.

The Minister of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises, Young-sun Park (15.3%) came in second place, and Oh Se-hoon, former mayor of Seoul City (9.5%), came in third place. The difference between Representative Ahn and Minister Park was 8.8 percentage points, which was widened out of the margin of error.

After this, the Minister of Justice Chu Miae (6.8%), the former member of the Popular Force (6.3%) Na Kyung-won, the member of the Democratic Party Park Joo-min (4.1%) , Democratic Party member Woo Sang-ho (4.1%), Democratic Party member Geum Tae-seop (2.7%), and Seocho-gu Mayor Cho Eun-hee (1.3%) . %), followed by Representative Yoon Hee-suk (1.2%).

On the question of who is the most suitable candidate for mayor of Seoul among the panoptics, Ahn ranked first with 26.9% of support. They followed former mayor Oh Se-hoon (12.1%), former legislator Na Gyeong-won (7.4%) and former legislator Tae-seop Geum (3.7%).

Young-sun Park, Minister of Small and Medium Enterprises.  Central photo

Young-sun Park, Minister of Small and Medium Enterprises. Central photo

Among the pan-passport figures, the best candidate for mayor of Seoul was Minister Park Young-seon with 18.4%. After this, there were Minister Chu Mi-ae (7.7%), Representative Woo Sang-ho (5.8%), Representative Park Ju-min (5.1%) and Kim Jin-ae, Representative of the Open Democratic Party (2.2%).

54.8% of those surveyed said that the opposition should be unified. 26.3% of those surveyed said that they should not be unified.

When asked which party would vote if opposition candidates faced one-on-one, 41.7% of opposition candidates and 32.5% of passport candidates appeared. The difference was 11.2 percentage points, outside the error range. 23.8% of the floating class added “I don’t know” and “I don’t know”.

Meanwhile, the survey has a sampling error of 95% and a confidence level of ± 3.5% p. For more information, see the Central Electoral Survey Deliberation Committee website.

Reporter Hao Soo-min [email protected]




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