This paper examined the conflict among political parties in Shanghai concerning the national representative conference. An attempt to assassin Yun Hae on Sep. 28th 1922 is an emblematic incident to depict the complicated political situation in Shanghai at that time. Two parties were in conflict: one party that tried to call the national representative conference, claiming the new leading institute in place of the Provisional Government in Shanghai, and the other party that would have hold and defended the legitimacy of the Provisional Government. It was escalated by the proprietorial dispute of Han Hyeong-Gwon's Moscow money.
Yun Hae Incident might have been inevitable with the cumulative conflict between the political parties. Since there had been not many ways to solve a trouble for a political party on weaker ground. Thus the assassinator Kim Sang-ok and Kim Gu who is considered as the one behind the scene, chose to shoot Yun Hae. This choice had been influenced not only by the state of the political conflict but also by their temper as well. In this sense, it might not be inevitable to try to kill Yun Hae. It was the consequence of the paring the situation which had been transformed into violence, and the actors who were not willing to refuse violence in practice.
Violence creates diverse effects and reactions by the context that it occurred. Korean society in Shanghai showed their lukewarm response toward the Yun Hae Incident. It was not because that they sympathize the attempt to assassin him. Rather it shows the concerning of the fatal trouble that would occur when it was revealed that the assassinator was a Korean indeed.