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The National Assembly audit starts today (4th).

This is the first National Assembly since the inauguration of the Yun Seok-yeol government, and I am worried from the start whether people's livelihoods and policies will disappear and only political struggles will continue.

As the controversy over President Yoon Seok-yeol's diplomatic disaster and the question of the Board of Audit and Inspection regarding former President Moon Jae-in are added, a melee battle between the ruling and opposition parties is expected to lead to an extreme confrontation.



Reporter Hwa Kang-yoon reports. 



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From today to the 24th, adjunct committees such as the Steering Committee will have a state audit at the National Assembly until the 3rd of next month, a little later.



783 institutions, including major government ministries, are targeted, and as this is the first National Inspectorate since the inauguration of the Yun Seok-yeol administration, the theory of responsibility of the former government and the theory of checking in with the current government are expected to be fiercely contested.



Today, the first day, audits of major government agencies such as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of National Defense are scheduled from 10 am.



At the audit of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which is held in the presence of Minister Park Jin, whose proposal for dismissal has been approved by the National Assembly, it is expected that the opposition parties claiming diplomatic disasters, such as the president's profanity remarks and the failure of the Korea-U.S. summit, are expected to open fire.



Conversely, in the audit of the Ministry of National Defense, it is expected that the ruling party will take a break in the case of the shooting of an official of the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries during the Moon Jae-in administration and the repatriation of North Korean fishermen to North Korea.



In the audit of the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy, controversy will continue over the effectiveness of the previous government's policy to phase out nuclear power and the distribution of solar power facilities. seems to be