يحاول ذهب - حر
REBOOTING SOUTH KOREA
September 29, 2025
|Time
PRESIDENT LEE JAE-MYUNG ON HIS PLAN TO KICK-START HIS NATION'S ECONOMYAND COURT DONALD TRUMP
PRESIDENT LEE JAE-MYUNG IN SEOUL ON SEPT. 3
IT WAS NOT HOW LEE JAE-MYUNG ENVISIONED HIS FIRST DAY ON THE job. Following his election as South Korea's President on June 3, Lee's staff arrived at their new offices in central Seoul the next morning to find rooms strewn with trash and desks equipped with monitors but bereft of computers, which had all been piled in a corner. It was a struggle to get doors unlocked and find even basic stationery.
"It was a very busy and chaotic period," Lee, 61, tells TIME in his only Western media interview since taking office. "I thought that we had done much preparation in advance, but it was not sufficient."
LEE'S 1978 HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY EXAMINATION APPLICATION FORM PHOTOBehind the chaos was his disgraced predecessor, Yoon Suk-yeol, whose December declaration of martial law plunged the East Asian nation of 50 million into six months of political paralysis that concluded with Yoon's impeachment—and, after a snap poll, Lee's election.
Just over 100 days on, the new leader has moved with such speed that the chaos he encountered on his first day seems like a distant memory. In Seoul, one of the world's most densely populated cities, he has imposed a 600 million won ($430,000) cap on mortgage loans for property purchases to quell an overheated housing market. A new labor law, meanwhile, has reduced legal liabilities for striking workers, and some $10 billion of cash vouchers ranging from $110 to $330 have been distributed to every citizen, depending on income, to boost local businesses.
"One of my biggest accomplishments is that South Korea's domestic political situation has been stabilized," he says.
هذه القصة من طبعة September 29, 2025 من Time.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Time
Time
Zohran Mamdani is what big cities look like
A COUPLE OF WEEKS BEFORE HIS ELECTION VICTORY, Zohran Mamdani stood in front of a mosque in the Bronx.
3 mins
November 24, 2025
Time
BREAKING GOOD
Vince Gilligan leaves bad guys behind in a sci-fi epic with an unlikely hero
12 mins
November 24, 2025
Time
A LEGEND RETURNS
INSIDE LINDSEY VONN'S UNPRECEDENTED ATTEMPT AT AN OLYMPIC COMEBACK
17 mins
November 24, 2025
Time
VOTERS PUSH BACK
In Virginia-and elsewhere-Donald Trump's erratic economic policies spurred a backlash
3 mins
November 24, 2025
Time
Telling the truth of true crime
DIRECTOR CHARLIE SHACKLETON THOUGHT HE COULD have his cake and eat it too.
5 mins
November 24, 2025
Time
A woman under the influencer
INFLUENCER IS A DIVISIVE WORD. Your gut reaction to it—one that’s likely to be more negative the older you are—will probably be a good gauge of how you'll feel about HBO’s I Love LA, a hangout comedy created by and starring Shiva Baby breakout Rachel Sennott.
2 mins
November 24, 2025
Time
Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales on rebuilding trust online and off
JIMMY WALES DESCRIBES HIMSELF AS A “pathological optimist.” And yet, when the co-founder of Wikipedia spoke with TIME in October, he still seemed somewhat surprised that his online encyclopedia actually worked.
4 mins
November 24, 2025
Time
The Tragedy of Eric Adams
A DAY IN THE CITY WITH THE MAYOR OF NEW YORK
18 mins
November 24, 2025
Time
The Risk Report
SIGNALS ARE GROWING LOUDER that U.S. President Donald Trump wants Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro out of office. He'd like to accomplish this without starting a war that might not go to plan.
3 mins
November 24, 2025
Time
George Clooney is quietly touching in a deeply meta role
ONE MINUTE A MAN IS A HOT YOUNG MOVIE star; the next, he’s a silver fox.
3 mins
November 24, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
