The Korea Herald

Ruling party calls for bipartisan­ship

People Power Party interim leader meets former President Moon Jae-in for first time since Yoon took office

- By Jung Min-kyung (mkjung@heraldcorp.com)

Ruling People Power Party interim leader Hwang Woo-yea called for unity in the political sphere Thursday, backed by a bipartisan alliance to mark the 15th anniversar­y of liberal late President Roh Moo-hyun’s death.

“Former President Roh had always emphasized the spirit of unity and co-prosperity alongside mutual compromise in politics,” the conservati­ve ruling party leader said in a party leadership meeting.

“We hope the new leadership will cooperate in carrying out the way of politics that President Roh always dreamed of,” he added.

Hwang’s remarks came as tensions between the ruling party and opposition have risen in recent days following President Yoon Suk Yeol’s veto of a bill mandating a special counsel investigat­ion into accusation­s that the current administra­tion had interfered in a military probe into the death of a young Marine in July 2023.

Yoon also faces an uphill battle in carrying out initiative­s for his remaining three years in office if he fails to cooperate with the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea. The Democratic Party won 175 seats in the single chamber, 300-seat National Assembly in the April 10 parliament­ary election.

Thousands of people gathered for the 15th annual memorial service today in Bongha village in Gimhae, South Gyeongsang Province, Roh’s birthplace and where he lived postretire­ment.

Formerly a lawyer from humble family origins, Roh became the ninth president of South Korea and served his five-year term until 2008. Roh was found dead in 2009 in an apparent suicide near his post-retirement home.

Hwang and People Power Party Floor Leader Rep. Choo Kyung-ho met liberal former President Moon Jae-in at his home in Yangsan, South Gyeongsang Province, in the afternoon, after paying respect to Roh at the memorial ceremony held at Bongha village.

The meeting marked the first meeting between the ruling party leadership and Moon, who served as Roh’s senior secretary for civil affairs and chief of staff, after Yoon took office in May 2022.

Despite Hwang’s hopes for stronger bipartisan cooperatio­n, the ruling party expressed regret over Assembly Speaker Rep. Kim Jin-pyo’s and the main opposition party’s plan to hold a revote next week on the vetoed special counsel bill.

“We express regret over the Assembly speaker’s statement, which reflects his willingnes­s to manage the parliament in a unilateral manner, despite the position (of the speaker) requiring political neutrality,” Choo said during Thursday’s party leadership meeting.

In Wednesday’s press conference marking the end of his two-year term as Assembly Speaker, Kim revealed that he plans to put the vetoed special investigat­ion bill for a revote in an extra plenary session scheduled for May 28, even if the rival parties “fail to reach an agreement” on the bill.

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