Chinanews.com, November 25, comprehensive Korean media reports, on the 24th local time, South Korea’s ruling party’s Democratic Party Secretary-General Yoon Gwan-seok said at a press conference that out of consideration of reorganizing party affairs, he and the party’s congressmen who are mainly responsible for government affairs , Reached a consensus on collective resignation.

Data map: On October 31, 2021 local time, citizens in Hanbok admire the autumn scenery in the National Folk Museum in Seoul, South Korea.

Photo by China News Agency reporter Liu Xu

  According to reports, Yoon Kwan-seok, secretary-general of the Democratic Party of Korea’s ruling party, said that in order to build a new Democratic Party, he made a major decision to resign with a feeling of "party first and private later."

  According to the report, the people who resigned this time include Yin Guanshi and the chairman of the Policy Committee Park Wanzhu, the vice chairman of the Policy Committee Liu Dongxiu, the chief spokesperson Gao Rongzhen, and the chairman of the Strategic Planning Committee Song Jiaxi.

  Yin Guanshi said that during the important period of the Korean election, the people asked the Common Democratic Party to take a new look through active reforms.

In order to comply with the demands of citizens and supporters, the Common Democratic Party’s Electoral Countermeasures Committee has also decided and is implementing reform and comprehensive reorganization.

  In addition, Yin Guanshi said that the resignation of party leader Song Yongji has not been discussed.

  According to previous reports, a poll released by the South Korean polling agency Realmeter on the 24th showed that the approval rate of Yoon Seok Yee, the presidential candidate of the National Power Party, the largest opposition party, was 44.1%, and the approval rate of Lee Jae-Ming, the candidate of the ruling party Democratic Party, was 37%.

Another 54.3% of the interviewees said they “hope that the opposition parties will achieve a regime change in the next general election”.