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Kim Seong-su (Korean: 김성수; October 11, 1891 – February 18, 1955), art name Inchon, was a Korean educator, independence activist, journalist, entrepreneur, politician, and calligrapher. He served as the second Vice President of South Korea from 1951 to 1952.
Her husband is Kim Jae-yeol (김재열), great-grandson of vice president of South Korea and journalist Kim Seong-su. Since 2019, he has been president of Samsung Global Research (삼성글로벌리서치). They married in 2000, and have one son and three daughters. [6]
President Took office Left office Time in office 1: Yi Si-yeong 이시영 李始榮 (1868 –1953) 24 July 1948 9 May 1951 (Resigned) 2 years, 289 days Korea Democratic Party: Rhee Syng-man; 2: Kim Seong-su 김성수 金性洙 (1891 –1955) 17 May 1951 29 May 1952 (Resigned) [1] 1 year, 12 days Korea Democratic Party 3: Ham Tae-young 함태영 ...
Rhee wanted his protégé, Lee Ki-poong, elected as Vice President—a separate office under Korean law at that time. When Lee, who was running against Chang Myon (the ambassador to the United States during the Korean War, a member from the opposition Democratic Party) won the vote with a wide margin, the opposition Democratic Party claimed the ...
In Brazil, the second lady (Segunda-dama do Brasil), is the wife of the vice president and resides with him at Jaburu's Palace. [22] In Colombia, the second lady or second gentleman is the equivalent of the spouse or partner of the vice president of Colombia who, together with the vice president, resides in the Vice Presidential House.
Ri Sol-ju was reportedly born into an elite family -- her father was a professor and her mother a doctor -- but little else is known about her life.
Kim, 52, previously worked as a vice president and assistant general counsel at Kaiser Permanente and as a partner at the Jones Day law firm. He served in the U.S. Attorney's office in Los Angeles ...
He served as the acting party President until the leadership election [79] that was held on 11 June. [80] [81] On 21 May, Kim Byong-wook, who quit the party in January following a sexual harassment controversy, officially returned to the PPP. [82] [83] On 11 June, Lee Jun-seok was elected the new President of the party, defeating Na Kyung-won ...