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Four Democrats, who are incumbent ministers, today announced they will not vote in April. Hwang Gyo-an, the Korean party's leader, said he would run for a rugged metropolitan area and asked other members of the party to join the party.

This news was interviewed by journalist Jung.

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The sum of the three incumbent players who did not run for the general election was nine.

As Yeouido's years of politics were long, it seemed to be a lot of trouble to put it down.

[Kim Hyun-mi / Minister of Land, Infrastructure and Transport (3rd): Thank you again for making me today. thank you.]

[Park Young-sun / Minister of Small and Medium Venture Business (4th): (18th general election) was the same election as the Siberian cold wave for the Democrats, and I was elected very hard.]

[Eun-hye Yoo / Minister of Social Affairs and Minister of Education (Re-election): As a female social prime minister and minister of education, I will do my best until my use is complete.]

Fourth-century camp secretary of state administration and security is also absent, but he did not hold a press conference because he was the secretary of elections.

Of the four districts, two of Goyang have the potential for strategic nomination.

Hwang Gyo-an, the Korean party's leader, shouted at the first round of the year's rally, "Let's win the general election to stop the tyranny of the regime."

Rough terrain in the metropolitan area, the Democratic Party has declared that it will run for the Sen district.
[Huang Gyo-an / Free Korean Party Representative: I will take the lead in integrating. I will go to rough land and create this miracle to die and survive.]

Lawmakers also asked to go to rough land just like themselves.

The big match between Prime Minister Lee Nak-yeon, who will return to the Democratic Party, and presidential candidates in Jongno, Seoul, will be spotted.

Eight lawmakers, including Yoo Seung-min, escaped the right future party by saying that they will create a new Conservative Party.

As Ahn Cheol-soo's return to political ranks adds up, opposition parties are seeing a merger.

(Video coverage: Kim Hyun Sang, Ha Rong, Video editing: Choi Hye Young)