Turning to the domestic political arena.
The ruling Saenuri Party is experiencing a growing level of internal strife over its
interim leader's drive to overhaul the party.
His efforts have begun with a personnel shakeup that's got party members taking sides.
For these stories and more from the National Assembly, we turn to our Park Ji-won
Interim leader In Myung-jin's personnel shakeup is rattling nerves at the ruling Saenuri Party.
In has been pushing core members of the pro-President Park faction to take responsibility for the
current crisis and leave the party.
In some cases it's working -- former party chair Lee Jung-hyun left earlier in the week,...
and five-term lawmaker Jeong Kab-yoon announced his departure Wednesday morning.
But eight-term lawmaker Suh Chung-won,... another key pro-Park figure,... counterattacked,
saying it is the interim leader who is really destroying the party and he's the one who
should leave.
"The interim leader is acting like a tyrant.
Isn't he acting lawlessly?
And he only took the position a few days ago.
Is he a holy man?
I can't understand what he's doing in the party.
Is he actually trying to straighten things out here or just cause more controversy?"
The group of former Saenuri lawmakers who left late last month... to create their own
party... has sought to distinguish itself, saying that they will be different from their
old party.
"We once again vow to create a horizontal party, where party members and the public
are the focus.
We will make a reform-minded, warm-hearted and transparent conservative party."
Across the aisle, the opposition parties have stepped up their criticism of President Park
Geun-hye.
"President Park can't delay her impeachment... with sly schemes like press conferences aimed
at influencing the public, while she refuses to appear in court."
"The core of the Park administration's management of state affairs relied on closed-door, one-on-one
meetings -- not open government meetings.
These closed-door meetings were a playground for political maneuvering, and this administration's
ineptitude, failure and corruption could have been predicted."
"Meanwhile,... the constitutional revision committee on held its first official meeting
on Wednesday.
The bipartisan panel will have until the end of June to discuss the possibility of revising
the Constitution -- last revised in the wake of the nation's pro-democracy movement in
1987.
Park Ji-won, Arirang News."

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