Managing a first-class society by cultivating elected officials with morality and competency. 

Cultivating Elected Officials

The current lack of verification for elected officials who play a key role in leading society.

The need to establish evaluation criteria to verify the qualifications of elected officials: morality and competency.

Cultivating elected officials who can cost-effectively improve regional competitiveness and quality of life.

Leaping forward to a first-class society and managing it by cultivating elected officials.


Current elected officials wield great power. They legislate policies that influence the lives of citizens and determine the direction of the country. However, despite the importance of their work, elections are often based on popularity without sufficient verification of these officials.


Elected officials must possess sufficient competency and morality. They should have the competency to solve problems and the morality to serve the public interest, not private interests. Establishing evaluation criteria based on these qualities is necessary to ensure that the right people are elected.


Elected officials must play a role in improving the quality of life and regional competitiveness in a cost-effective manner. In this case, citizens will re-elect the officials through evaluation, driving the development of the region. 


Great talents can change the future of a country. The United States, which gained independence just over 240 years ago, and the Chinese Communist Party, which was a small and powerless organization about 100 years ago, became the great powers because they had outstanding leaders to guide them. Fostering capable elected officials will be the starting point for the Korean Peninsula to leap forward into a first-class society.

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