(4rd LD) Bellwether mayoral by-elections under way in Seoul and Busan
(ATTN: UPDATES with latest turnout rates in paras 5-8)
SEOUL, April 7 (Yonhap) -- Voters went to polls to cast ballots for new mayors in Seoul and Busan, the country's two biggest cities, on Wednesday in by-elections deemed a critical bellwether for next year's presidential contest.
Voting began at 6 a.m. at 3,459 polling stations across the country and will last till 8 p.m. Besides the two mayoral seats, 19 other regional public posts are up for grabs, including the county governor for Uiryeong in South Gyeongsang Province and a ward office head in the southeastern city of Ulsan.
In Seoul, a total of 8.4 million voters are eligible to vote in the mayoral election while the Busan mayoral poll has slightly more than 2.9 million qualified voters.
The turnout rate for early voting for the by-elections, conducted last Friday and Saturday, reached 20.54 percent, a record high for any by-election.
As of 5 p.m. Wednesday, the overall turnout came to 47.3 percent with the early voting tally included. It is down by 8.8 percentage points from the tally at the same time during the 2018 local elections and is lower than 62.2 percent in the April 15 general elections last year.
By region, 4.19 million people, or 49.7 percent of the total eligible voters, have voted in Seoul, while the rate is 44.6 percent in Busan. The figures came in at 33 percent and 63.8 percent in Ulsan and Uiryeong, respectively.
In the capital, the turnout rate was the highest in the Gangnam area south of the Han River. Many people in the affluent districts of Gangnam, Seocho and Songpa are in an uproar over sharp hikes in property taxes under the Moon Jae-in administration. The turnout rates in all the three wards were over 50 percent as of 5 p.m.

People put on disposable gloves before casting their ballots to protect themselves against the coronavirus at a polling station in the southern port city of Busan on April 7, 2021 (Yonhap)
In the early morning, some voters were already waiting in line in front of a polling station in Sillim-dong, southern Seoul, to cast their ballots before going to work.
They stood 1 meter apart from each other to maintain social distancing and were seen using hand sanitizers placed at the station to protect against the coronavirus.
"I left home early this morning as I have to go to work by 8 a.m.," a Seoul citizen surnamed Koo said. "I am a bit tired because I had to get up earlier than usual, but given the importance of this election, it is nothing."
An elderly couple, both in their 90s, came together to vote, using walking sticks, to a polling station in Yongsan, central Seoul.
The wife, surnamed Lee, said they decided to vote first thing in the morning.
"Otherwise we might have forgotten it," she said.

People cast their ballots to elect a new Seoul mayor at a polling station in western Seoul on April 7, 2021. (Yonhap)

These photos provided by the National Assembly press corps show the Democratic Party's Seoul mayoral candidate Park Young-sun (L) and People Power Party candidate Oh Se-hoon during their election campaigns on March 30, 2021. (Yonhap)
The mayoral elections, especially in Seoul which is home to nearly 10 million of the country's total 52 million population, are seen as definite harbingers of public opinion ahead of the presidential election set for March 2022.
The by-elections take place as the president and his ruling party have been grappling with public outrage and falling public support ratings over spiking housing prices.
A land speculation scandal involving public officials at LH, the state housing developer, which erupted about a month ahead, further pummeled public sentiment against the ruling bloc.
The main opposition People Power Party (PPP) has been harnessing the Moon government and the ruling Democratic Party (DP)'s real estate policy blunders to rally support for its election campaign to "pass judgment" against the ruling bloc.
The DP is also on weak moral standing as the two mayoral by-elections were called after the previous mayors -- Park Won-soon in Seoul and Oh Keo-don in Busan, both affiliated with the liberal party -- left the posts last year amid sexual harassment allegations.
Ex-Mayor Park apparently took his own life in July last year and Oh stepped down from the Busan mayoral seat in April, both in the face of sexual harassment accusations raised by female subordinates.
The new mayors of the two cities will serve out the remaining 14 months of the former mayors' four-year terms.

Kim Young-choon, the Democratic Party's Busan mayoral candidate (L), and his rival from the People Power Party Park Heong-joon rally support in Busan on April 1, 2021. (Yonhap)
The latest opinion polls, disclosed before the imposition of a ban on such polls' release for one week before election day, showed Oh Se-hoon, the PPP's Seoul mayoral candidate, leading DP rival Park Young-sun by a formidable margin of about 20 percentage points.
The opposition party's pre-election opinion poll dominance was pronounced in Busan as well, where PPP candidate Park Heong-joon was running well ahead of DP opponent Kim Young-choon.
Rough results of the elections are expected to start emerging around midnight Wednesday.
As the by-elections are held amid a wave of new COVID-19 cases in the country, health authorities urged voters to wear masks throughout their polling processes, except for identity checking purposes, and keep distance from other voters at polling stations.
jaeyeon.woo@yna.co.kr
pbr@yna.co.kr
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