<Anchor>



In the Democratic Party, room for factional conflict continues even after the election of a non-captain.

In the midst of this, Rep. Jae-myung Lee of the Democratic Party took steps to establish a foundation within the party, such as meeting Kim Dong-yeon, the governor-elect of Gyeonggi Province.



This is reporter Yoo Soo-hwan.



<Reporter>



Rep. Lee Jae-myung and Gyeonggi Governor-elect Kim Dong-yeon, who had unified candidates in the last presidential election by promising political reform, joined hands again in the National Assembly.



[Lee Jae-myung / Democratic Party lawmaker: We need to do it in an integrated way.]

[



Kim Dong-yeon / Gyeonggi Governor-elect: Thank you for your time.]



I had a private dinner with about 10 lawmakers who had helped, and it was interpreted as laying the foundation for the party ahead of the August National Convention.



A bill to approve the formation of a new leadership to prepare for the national convention was also passed.



The 86th group's eldest brother, Woo Sang-ho, is the head of the emergency response committee, followed by floor leader Park Hong-geun, third-term representative Han Jeong-ae, re-elected Park Jae-ho, first-elected lawmaker Lee Yong-woo, and out-of-house committee member Kim Hyun-jung.



However, friction between factions continued.



Rep. Hong Young-pyo of the pro-moon system hit Rep. Lee Jae-myung again directly,



[Hong Young-pyo/Democratic Party Member (MBC Radio): 'I ran because my party wanted me', because this is a lie.]



Rep. Jeong Sye-gyun-gye Lee Won-wook criticized Lee's supporters in a detour, saying, "We must keep our distance" from 'political hooligans'.



In the pro-Lee Jae-myung circle, where a large number of supporters have recently joined, a voice calling for lowering the period for recognition of the right party member to exercise the right to vote at the national convention from six months to three months has been announced, foretelling a battle with the pro-Moon circle.