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Rival parties fail to agree on parliamentary committee formation

Created at 30 Jun · 7:41 AM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

South Korea's ruling and main opposition parties failed to agree on the formation of parliamentary standing committees. The ruling Democratic Party plans to unilaterally elect 11 committee chiefs, including the chair of the key legislation and judiciary committee, at a plenary session.

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Key Numbers

11parliamentary committee chiefs to be elected
161seats held by the ruling Democratic Party
300total seats in the National Assembly

Who's Involved

Democratic Party (DP)
ruling party planning unilateral committee elections
People Power Party (PPP)
main opposition party seeking judiciary committee chairmanship
Han Byung-do
DP floor leader
Jeong Jeom-sig
PPP floor leader
Cho Jeong-sik
new National Assembly speaker
Rival parties fail to agree on parliamentary committee formation

↳ Why This Matters

The failure to reach a consensus on parliamentary committee leadership could lead to legislative gridlock and hinder the passage of key bills, particularly those requiring approval from the powerful judiciary committee.

Key facts

  • South Korea's ruling Democratic Party and main opposition People Power Party (PPP) failed to reach an agreement on forming parliamentary standing committees.
  • The Democratic Party, holding a majority with 161 out of 300 seats, intends to unilaterally elect 11 committee chiefs.
  • The PPP argued that it should chair the legislation and judiciary committee to ensure checks and balances.
  • Last-minute talks between the floor leaders of both parties did not result in a compromise.

SEOUL, June 30 (Yonhap) -- Rival political parties in South Korea failed on Tuesday to agree on the formation of parliamentary standing committees for the latter half of the National Assembly's term. The ruling Democratic Party (DP) announced its intention to proceed with the unilateral election of 11 committee chiefs, including the influential chair of the legislation and judiciary committee, during a plenary session scheduled for 5 p.m.

The dispute over committee chairmanships has been ongoing for weeks, with particular contention surrounding the judiciary committee, a crucial panel with the authority to approve bills before they reach a final vote. The PPP has argued that holding the judiciary committee chairmanship is essential for maintaining legislative checks and balances.

Despite last-minute talks between DP floor leader Han Byung-do and his PPP counterpart, Rep. Jeong Jeom-sig, no compromise was reached. The DP's majority in the 300-seat National Assembly, holding 161 seats, provides them with the numbers to push through their appointments.

Frequently asked questions

The rival parties are at odds over the distribution of parliamentary committee chairmanships, especially for the key legislation and judiciary committee.

The ruling Democratic Party holds a majority in the National Assembly with 161 out of 300 seats, allowing them to unilaterally elect committee chiefs.

This committee is key as it has the power to approve bills before they are put to a plenary vote.

What Happens Next

01The ruling Democratic Party plans to elect 11 parliamentary committee chiefs at a plenary session.
02The National Assembly will hold a plenary session at 5 p.m.

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Cadence

How It Developed

Rival parties failed to agree on the formation of parliamentary standing committees.
The ruling Democratic Party plans to unilaterally elect 11 committee chiefs.
The opposition People Power Party argued for chairing the judiciary committee to maintain checks and balances.

Sources

T1
Rival parties fail to agree on parliamentary committee formation ahead of plenary meetingYonhap News Agency

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