Choi Sang-mok said, "The abolition of the automatic budget bill is difficult to accept...I'll suggest a request for reconsideration."

2024.11.28 PM 04:53
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Strategy and Finance Choi Sang-mok said he would propose the president's veto, saying it is difficult to accept the passage of the National Assembly Act revision bill, which includes "abolishing the automatic bill of budget and incidental bills."

In a briefing on the government's position on the abolition of the automatic denial system at the Seoul Government Complex today (28th), Deputy Prime Minister Choi said, "I deeply regret that the bill was unilaterally passed by the opposition party as the minister in charge of the government budget."

Choi said the "automatic" system was introduced in the past as a so-called National Assembly Advancement Act to improve the parliament's excessive political disputes and failure to comply with the legal deadline for handling the budget bill.

The government expressed concern about the problems of the bill, such as the side effects of the delayed budget decision on people's livelihoods and the economy, and asked the National Assembly for careful discussion, but added that it passed the plenary session led by the opposition party without sufficient discussion at the National Assembly.

Deputy Prime Minister Choi said that if the bill is transferred to the government, he will propose to the president a request for reconsideration stipulated in the Constitution to fulfill his duties as the minister of the competent ministry.




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