The campaign strategies for South Korea’s two major parties are starting to take shape as they fill candidacies for the legislative general election less than 50 days away. The Democratic Party of Korea, the main opposition that has a majority in the National Assembly, is playing the “Yoon Suk Yeol card,” seeking to capitalize on the strong anti-Yoon sentiment in the party’s base. Rep. Kim Min.
The campaign strategies for South Korea’s two major parties are starting to take shape as they fill candidacies for the legislative general election less than 50 days away. The Democratic Party of Korea, the main opposition that has a majority in the National Assembly, is playing the “Yoon Suk Yeol card,” seeking to capitalize on the strong anti-Yoon sentiment in the party’s base. Rep. Kim Min.
Kim Kyung-yul, the man believed to have caused recent political tensions between the ruling party and President Yoon Suk Yeol, said, Sunday, that he won’t seek a seat in the National Assembly for the upcoming elections.
President Yoon Suk Yeol and Han Dong-hoon, the interim leader of the ruling People Power Party (PPP), share a short-term goal: winning the April 10 general elections. If people share a goal, they have less reason to fight. But some do, particularly when their ideas on how to achieve it are poles apart and both are so hardheaded that neither side is ready to make concessions. When their ideas have little in common, it’s tough to narrow their differences.
President Yoon Suk Yeol and the People Power Party s interim leader Han Dong-hoon met on Tuesday at a traditional market in Seocheon, South Chungcheong Province, signaling their efforts to mend the political rift that stemmed from differing views toward allegations of graft involving first lady Kim Keon Hee and questions about Han s fairness in the candidate nomination process. Han told reporters at Seoul Station, as.