Unified Korean Lands wrote:Communaccord wrote:These don’t really seem like accurate parties or platforms based on current Korean politics. I would recommend poster research post-communist elections, particularly Germany, to gain a better understanding of what a democratic united Korea election would look like.
First off: Liberty Korea is and would continue to be the dominant right wing faction, gaining increased support from younger South Koreans who tend to view reunification more negatively. They are also most certainly NOT “pro-China”, and instead favor the West.
The Democratic Party , a liberal party and current ruling party, would most likely embrace any liberal revolution movement from North Korea.
As to Bareaun and people’s, they are one combined party IRL.
As to the WPOK, they would be quite powerful in the North still, since the Kim’s are seen as gods, hardly the smallest party, probably growing stronger as harsh realities of reunification settle in.
I could go on, but this is frankly not worth the additional time, being a failure as speculative history, due to a misunderstanding of how these sorts of deals play out.
This is not supposed to be real Korean politics, so some of the parties you mentioned don’t even exist in our timeline. Keep in mind this is an alternate Korea, and not real Korea. Party logos and names are just borrowed from real parties, but are not necessarily the same as their real life equivalents.
Ikay, so what’s the divergence point from our history?