<Anchor> The



US presidential election has created a lot of talk about it, so there are remarkable news for us even in the federal parliamentary elections.

Four Korean candidates entered the House of Representatives, the highest ever.



Reporter Im Sang-beom on the report.



<Reporter>



Young-ok, Eun-ju, and Sun-ja.



Three Korean women with a friendly name just heard entered the US House of Representatives.



Republican candidates Young Kim and Young-ok, who are candidates for the Democratic Party, outnumbered active Democrats by 1.2 percentage points and 4,000 votes in the 39th District of California, where the votes were counted after 10 days of election.



During the midterm election two years ago, they lost in the last minute vote by mail, so this is a new year's war.



Young Kim Eun, who was born in Incheon and immigrated with his parents when he was a teenager, has dreamed of an American dream by working as an assistant to former lawmaker Ed Royce, a friendly fellow who served as the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.



[Young Kim (Kim Young-ok) / US Congressman-elect: The US promises are alive.

The United States is a country where immigrants from Korea can grow up to become members of the House of Representatives.

I will work to keep this promise upheld.] In the



48th District of California, Republican Michelle Park Steele and Eunjoo won.



Born in Seoul, he was a full-time housewife as an immigrant. During the 1992 LA riot, he has repeatedly transformed into a social activist and politician.



In Washington State, four Korean congressmen came out, including Marylin Strickland and Sunja, who had fathers who were US soldiers in Korea, as Democratic candidates, and Democrat Andy Kim, who was reelected in New Jersey.



Democratic and Republican, each with two members, and are expected to play a role in improving the ROK-US relations and the rights of Koreans.



[Michelle Park Steele (Park Eun-joo) / US Congressman-elect: Since both parties won the election, I think it would be a greater strength if four people could work together to help Korean Americans.]



( Video editing: Oh No-Young)