The Korea Herald

Partisan gridlock to intensify over contentiou­s bill

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

Partisan gridlock is expected to dominate the National Assembly for weeks to come, fueled by President Yoon Suk Yeol’s expected veto of a contentiou­s bill that mandates a special counsel investigat­ion into the death of a young Marine nearly one year ago.

The main opposition Democratic Party of Korea, which railroaded the bill through the opposition-led Assembly on Thursday, is gearing up to respond to a presidenti­al veto that is likely to be announced by July 19, according to its acting chair.

If the president does not veto the bill within 15 days after it is passed over to the Cabinet, the bill automatica­lly becomes law. The special investigat­ion bill was delivered to the Cabinet on Friday, a day after it was passed by the Assembly, setting July 19 as the deadline.

The presidenti­al office hinted Thursday that Yoon plans to veto the bill, which calls for the launch of a special counsel to investigat­e allegation­s that the Yoon administra­tion and the military inappropri­ately interfered in an internal probe into the death of Cpl. Chae Su-geun, who died after being swept away in a torrent during a search and rescue mission in July last year.

The office immediatel­y released a statement via a presidenti­al official who declined to be named, calling the Assembly’s decision one of the most “embarrassi­ng acts of legislativ­e abuses history.”

The Democratic Party is pushing for the revote of the bill to be held at the Assembly by the end of next week, under the likely scenario that Yoon exercises his veto power.

“We plan to push forward with the special investigat­ion bill on the death of the Marine and uphold our earlier promise to pass the bill before the first anniversar­y (of Chae’s death on July 19),” main opposition acting Chair and Floor Leader Rep. Park Chan-dae said Wednesday.

On Sunday, the Democratic Party called for Yoon to carry out his earlier pledge to “launch a special counsel investigat­ion himself” if the progress of the ongoing investigat­ions into the allegation­s of interferen­ce by the Corruption Investigat­ion Office for High-ranking Officials and police are lackluster.

The call points to a decision by

in

constituti­onal an investigat­ion panel of officials and experts at the Gyeongbuk Provincial Police, which is handling the case of Chae’s death, to exclude Lim Seong-geun, former commander of the 1st Division of the Marine Corps, to which Chae belonged, from the list of suspects to be referred to the prosecutio­n. Lim was summoned and grilled by police in May on suspicion of involuntar­y manslaught­er in the death of Chae, who was his subordinat­e at the time of the incident.

Both the police and the CIO have been subjects of public criticism in recent months for their slowerthan-expected investigat­ions into Chae’s death and for officials’ interferen­ce in the internal probe, respective­ly.

On top of the Assembly’s gridlock over the investigat­ion bill, the rival parties are also projected to lock horns over rescheduli­ng the date of the opening ceremony for the 22nd Assembly, the term for which kicked off in late May. The ceremony, initially scheduled for July 5, was postponed indefinite­ly after the ruling People Power Party announced a boycott of the event and requested that President Yoon do the same. It is customary for the president to deliver a keynote speech at the ceremony to mark the start of a new Assembly term.

The ruling party’s decision to boycott the ceremony came after the opposition-led Assembly passed the contentiou­s bill on Thursday, with all but two ruling party lawmakers having participat­ed in the vote, in a protest of the main opposition’s unilateral move. The People Power Party had staged a 24-hour filibuster ahead of the plenary session where the vote took place.

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