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The ousted president is now on trial for corruption and other offences. But the Bareun party’s own leader Lee Hye-Hoon has been under increasing pressure since prosecutors last month opened an investigation into allegations a businesswoman gave her cash and gifts worth about INR 3,201,113.65 over nearly a dozen occasions.
She denies the accusations but stepped down today, telling her party lawmakers: “I apologise for causing concern because of my lack of virtue.” She insisted she would clear her name and “the truth will come out sooner or later”. Lee took the helm of Bareun — or “Justice” — in June, after the government changed hands with the election of liberal president Moon Jae-In.
She vowed to make Bareun the “main base” of conservatism rather than Park’s party, now renamed Liberty Korea, but the allegations undermined those efforts. Yonhap news agency said the scandal dealt a “major blow” to the party’s drive for “new, transparent and warm” conservatism.