South Korea’s Yoon to meet opposition leader amid bid to reset presidency

The meeting is the first that President Yoon Suk-yeol (left) will hold with opposition leader Lee Jae-myung since taking office. PHOTOS: REUTERS, AFP

SEOUL - South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol will meet opposition leader Lee Jae-myung for talks on April 29, after a crushing election defeat for the President’s ruling party led to widespread calls for him to change his style of leadership.

Mr Yoon’s People Power Party (PPP) failed to make inroads into the opposition’s grip on Parliament in the April 10 election, which was widely seen as a referendum on the conservative leader’s first two years in power.

The meeting is the first that Mr Yoon will hold with Mr Lee since taking office, and comes as analysts have said he may have slipped into lame duck status after his combative political stance appeared to have alienated many voters.

Both the opposition and his own PPP urged Mr Yoon to change course, especially after he initially appeared to shrug off the election result, which in turn sent his support ratings in opinion polls plunging to their lowest point of around 20 per cent.

At stake was whether he could try to regain the initiative for his pledges to cut taxes, ease business regulations, and expand family support in the world’s fastest-ageing society, while safeguarding fiscal responsibility.

Mr Yoon also faces a tough dilemma in his push for healthcare reforms. Young doctors walked off the job more than two months ago in protest over the centrepiece plan of increasing the number of doctors, and more are threatening to join the protest.

There are, however, questions over whether the April 29 meeting will be able to make any breakthroughs to unlock the stalemate in government. Mr Lee’s Democratic Party is firmly in control of Parliament, hamstringing Mr Yoon’s ability to pass legislation.

In a sign of the political wrangling to get an upper hand, aides to the two leaders struggled to agree on the time and agenda for their meeting for more than a week before Mr Lee proposed sitting down with no preconditions or set agenda.

Mr Lee has called for a one-time allowance of 250,000 won (S$247) for all South Koreans to help cope with inflation, but the PPP has called it the kind of populist policy that would make the situation worse and cost 13 trillion won for the government budget. REUTERS

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