Unification of 野 caught in ‘5% of cable phone calls’ … 吳 ⋅ 安, no major change



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Check-in 2021.03.18 19:21 | Revision 2021.03.18 19:23

Se-Hoon Oh and Chul-Soo Ahn Collapse After Unification Negotiations
Jin Joong-kwon “Why don’t you include street visits in the method?”

Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon and Ahn Cheol-soo, the National Party Candidate’s working-level negotiating group, met twice on the 18th to unify the opposition, but could not reach a conclusion. . Both sides said they would continue negotiations until 19, the last day of candidate registration, but ‘unification’ through public opinion polls has become practically impossible.



National Party Mayor Ahn Chul-soo and Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon, the People’s Power, are taking a photo before the unification vision presentation held at The Plus Studio in Yeongdeungpo, Seoul on the day fifteen.

On this day, the issue on which the two parties could not agree until the end and which they fought hard was “the proportion of fixed telephony surveys reflected.” The two sides fought for “competitiveness” and “suitability” in the survey questionnaire until the day before. Candidate Oh insisted on the question of “competitiveness” on the side of the candidate who knew “applicability.”

However, in the morning of the morning, candidate Se-Hoon Oh appeared on the radio and suggested “a simple summary method by asking one organization for its aptitude and the other for competitiveness.” It is to entrust the suitability survey and the competitiveness survey to each of the two institutions and add them together.

However, even in this morning’s negotiations, the two sides failed to close the disagreement. Both parties announced: “Starting tomorrow, all candidates will be registered.” However, when the news of the breakdown of the negotiations broke, Ahn said: “I accept Oh’s proposal.” This resumed the afternoon negotiations, but the conclusion was the same. Both parties checked the difference and parted ways in 15 minutes.

The reason the two parties could not reduce the disagreement was “the proportion of corded telephones.” Lee Tae-gyu, general secretary of the National Assembly Party, said: “It was said that (candidate Oh said ‘accepted’ in the morning) had completely excluded the landline survey rate,” he said. “By the way, opinions disagreed on this part.”

People’s Power has argued: “Let’s include landline phone surveys at 5% to 10%, considering that 8% of Seoul’s citizens do not have wireless phones.” On the other hand, the National Assembly insisted on a survey of 100% wireless phones. In today’s negotiations, the people’s power insisted that at least 5% of landlines should be put at the polls.

General Secretary Chung Yang-seok said, “The party has the will of the party,” when asked, “Is there no disagreement with the party leadership regarding the reflection of the proportion of wireline and wireless phone surveys? ” In the morning of the morning, the power of the people said in a press release under the name of the Office of Planning and Coordination, “The fixed telephone ratio is reflected at the 20% level even in public opinion polls.” .

When unification fails, the two parties hold each other accountable. A People’s Strength official said: “It is a show that CEO Ahn Chul-soo will accept the proposal that Secretary General Lee Tae-gyu rejected.” A People’s Party official said: “In December 2015, when the revised bill of the Election Law for Public Officials using a wireless phone-based security number was passed, the leader of the Democratic Party, Kim Jong-in, he also praised it. ”

The day the news of the unification negotiations was unsuccessful, Jin Joong-kwon, a former professor at Dongyang University, said on Facebook: “What kind of sound X is the landline phone in this era?”



On the morning of the 18th, Yang-seok Chung, General Secretary of the People’s Power and Lee Tae-gyu, General Secretary of the People’s Party, are completing the negotiations for the unification of the opposition candidates Oh Se-hoon and Ahn Cheol- soo at the National Assembly in Yeouido, Seoul. / Group of reporters from national companies

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