Daejon, South Korea. What are the chances of 28 separate ballots folded exactly the same & then lining up with each other inside a ballot box?
Each voter is supposed the fold the ballot & not show who she/he voted for, & drop it into a ballot box. So how dud this happen?
South Korea's June 3 local elections descended into chaos.
Voting was suspended at multiple sites across Seoul. The cause: a shortage of ballots.
The National Election Commission explained that "a sharp surge in turnout led to the ballot shortage."
It also said it had "printed ballots for roughly 50 percent of voters, based on turnout in previous local elections."
Voting was halted at no fewer than 14 polling stations across Seoul.
Some voters did not finish casting their ballots until 10 p.m., even as counting had begun and nationwide broadcasts were already under way.
Past 1 a.m., citizens are still gathering at various locations, protesting and demanding a halt to the count and that the election be declared invalid.
https://t.co/WyCLZAco1S
๐ฐ๐ทKorean Patriots Sing National Anthem Amid Tense Standoff with Election Officials
Protests are currently breaking out nationwide over allegations of election fraud in yesterday's local elections.
Throughout the night, citizens have guarded the Songpa polling station to block the transport of ballot boxes. Amidst the chaos, the protest organizer urged a peaceful demonstration, warning, "Never respond to violence," and "Let's not be fooled twice like the Western District Court incident."
(Note: The Western District Court incident was triggered by the arrest of former President Yoon and ended in the vandalism of the courthouse.)
When the organizer called out, "Let's sing the national anthem together," the crowd united in song, encouraging one another. They remain in a tense standoff with election officials and the police.
Protests continue since last night at election offices and polling stations across the country.
The interesting thing is that, despite all that has happened, the PPP is not properly fighting against election fraud.
Instead of actually fighting against election fraud, they merely make a passing remark about the possibility of it occurring and ask their supporters for their support.
Even when the IEMT team came last year, the PPP refused to cooperate and
immediately accepted the election results.
Even now, they are simply causing trouble by joining forces with K-VOTING.
Do these games look familiar to the US?
Timeline of the Goyang/Ilsanseo-gu Poll Observer Dispute (June 2026 Local Elections)
June 1, 2026 (afternoon): PPP attempts to register 256 poll observers online for the 69 polling stations in Ilsanseo-gu, Goyang, via the NECโs election information system. The system blocks the ENTIRE list due to 'detection of duplicate registrants'.
June 1, 2026 (leading up to 6 PM): Repeated attempts to fix duplicates and resubmit cause significant delays and slowdowns. PPP claims they completed input around 4 PM, but system issues push them past the strict 6 PM legal deadline.
June 1, 2026 (after 6 PM): PPP switches to written (paper) submission after consulting the local election office. They arrive 30โ39 minutes late and are rejected by NEC officials.
June 1โ2, 2026: PPP protests the rejection, arguing system flaws and special provisions should allow acceptance (citing input logs). NEC Chairman Roh Tae-ak and the commission defend the decision under Article 274 of the Public Official Election Act, emphasizing strict deadline enforcement with no written agreement for exceptions.
June 2, 2026: Controversy escalates. PPP leaders (including district chair) stage strong protests (e.g., head-shaving demonstrations). The original X post highlights Roh Tae-akโs reported fury at PPP for โacting solely in favor of the Democratic Party as the final approver,โ framing it as perceived politicization.
June 3, 2026 (Election Day): The 69 polling stations operate without any PPP observers, leading to ongoing accusations of reduced transparency and potential favoritism toward the ruling Democratic Party. Voting proceeds amid broader expectations of strong DPK performance nationwide.
The world is now witnessing allegations of election fraud in South Korea.
South Korea stands at the center of a battle that could have implications far beyond its borders.
To all freedom-loving people around the world: please stand with the people of South Korea in defense of liberty, transparency, and democratic values. ๐ฐ๐ท๐