Lee Jun-seok, the new leader of the party, who took the helm of the first opposition party at the 6/11 National Power of the People Convention, entered Yeouido's Jeongga 10 years ago with 'Park Geun-hye Kids'.



In 2011, Park Geun-hye, then chairman of the Grand National Party's emergency countermeasures committee, paid attention to a 26-year-old man from Harvard University and recruited him as a surprise member.



The unusual 'spec' of a venture entrepreneur who runs a free tutoring education volunteer group for low-income students also received the media spotlight.



Along with Kim Jong-in and Lee Sang-don at the time, he was counted as the 'three non-captain Park Geun-hye' and played a leading role in re-creating the regime of the conservative camp.



Although it was considered a contributing factor in the inauguration of the Park Geun-hye government by giving a voice to youth issues, in 2016, she left the Saenuri Party and joined the Bareun Party.



In the 2017 presidential election, he ran for Yoo Seung-min, the candidate of the Bareun Party.



He returned to his 'pro-government' by joining the leadership of the Future United Party, which was created as a conservative union ahead of the general election last year.



Even for him, who served as the top member of the Conservative Party several times, the threshold in the House was high.



In the 2016 20th general election, the 2018 re/by-election and the 2020 21st general election, they challenged the conservatives in Seoul's Noonbyeong, but all were defeated.



Although he failed to enter the park, he actively appeared on TV to the extent that he was called 'Jongpyeon Faucet'.



He raised his awareness as a 'politician who knows what to say' with his outspoken remarks as his main specialty.



'It is for this reason that the nickname 'zero line middle ground' was born.



In the last April 7 by-election for mayor of Seoul, Oh Se-hoon supported the election as the head of the new media division at the Oh Se-hoon camp, drawing the votes of young men.



It was also his plan to put young people in their 20s and 30s, who were angry with the Moon Jae-in government, on a car wash.



Despite the criticism of gender separation, he raised the issue of reverse discrimination against men in their 20s and 30s in a feminist debate with former Dongyang University professor Jin Joong-kwon, 'Issue Fighting'.



He was nicknamed 'Junstone' and even formed an online political fandom.



Even in this party's presidential primary, he broke the Yeouido grammar with a three-way strategy without camp offices, vehicle support, and letters of support.



Instead, it maximized the 'non-face-to-face election campaign', which directly communicates with supporters through SNS.



With the abolition of the quota system for women and youth and the introduction of the basic qualification examination for politicians, it has gained particular support from the 20s and 30s who are thirsty for 'fair competition'.



▲ Born in Seoul (36) ▲ Department of Computer Science and Economics at Harvard University ▲ CEO of Classe Studio ▲ Member of the Emergency Response Committee of the Saenuri Party ▲ Supreme member of the Bareun Party, the Bareun Mirae Party, and the United Future Party ▲ People's Power Seoul Noh Won-byeong, Chairman



of the

Party Association

(Photo

Credit

: Yonhap) news)