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The People's Power formed an MBC polarized broadcasting TF to respond head-on.

Today (28th) will be a protest visit to MBC.

The presidential office also set out to counterattack with all its strength, stipulating that the essence was 'disparaging the alliance'.



Reporter Kang Cheong-wan tells the story of the passport movement. 



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The People's Power has formed a TF to respond to MBC's polarized broadcasting and announced that it would visit MBC today in protest.



[Ho-young Joo/People's Power Floor Leader: (MBC) It is understood that even the basics of the report of fact-checking were not followed.

It is an act of renunciation of responsibility as a public broadcaster to broadcast the received message, so-called Jirashi, with subtitles as it is.] The



suspicion of collusion with the Democratic Party has also been raised repeatedly.



33 minutes before floor leader Park Hong-geun's remarks, the senior secretary of the Democratic Party's office circulated the MBC video to the Internet community and quoted the MBC 3rd union statement saying, 'It will be reported soon'.



The secretary countered that he was only posting the message he received and that he would hold the people accountable.



The President's Office has also launched an all-out response.



[Lee Jae-myung / Deputy Spokesperson for the President's Office (MBC Radio): I think that the fact that you made a statement that seems to disparage the allies is becoming a fact, and this is the essence of the problem.

The vulgarity controversy is not the essence.]



The presidential office also sent a six-item questionnaire asking about the details of the press, and MBC said it was very sorry for the pressure that threatened freedom of the press.



A high-ranking official at the presidential office said that the report was suspected to have an intention to shake the government, and insisted that MBC's reporting behavior during the mad cow disease incident during the Lee Myung-bak administration was repeated.



Analysts also say that the background of the passport's tough response was a sense of crisis that it could lose the power of government as it was then.