
Hee-sook Yoon, Representative of the People’s Strength. Reporter Lim Hyun-dong
Rep. Yoon Hee-suk, the power of the people, aimed at the national comfort money mentioned by President Moon Jae-in and criticized “Doing what you feel like this is something you can only do with the money of the royal capital of the Joseon Dynasty.” .
Rep. Yoon said on Facebook on the 20th, “I will give the people the money collected from taxes to comfort the people,” and said, “This government seems to think that the power that has been delegated to the people for a while is completely theirs.” Pointed out.
He said, “The basics of fiscal expenditure are that people should save as much as possible and spend it in a highly effective place to be more effective than if the people originally used it,” he said. Explained the injustice of consolation money. Rep. Yoon added, “That is why it is a tremendous responsibility of the democratic government that has been entrusted with power to the people to reveal to the people where and why and how high the effect was.”
“That’s why people like Gyeonggi Governor Lee Jae-myeong elaborately emphasized the excuse that it has the effect of stimulating the economy while talking about the disaster subsidies for the people,” he said. He criticized him, saying, “I think they have absolute power when they see that they make a promise to sprinkle them.”
He said, “Is there a name to call different than populism or ticketing?” .
Previously, former lawmaker Yoo Seung-min also criticized the support for the National Comfort Fund as “a ticketing act before the election,” and that “the president is worse than the secretary of Shin Jae-min who quit the Ministry of Finance after worrying about issuing government bonds.
Regarding this, Gyeonggi Governor Lee Jae-myeong refuted, saying, “It is an insult to the President outside of common sense and disproportionate our people’s high sense of sovereignty.” “It is an era in which an active and unprecedented fiscal policy for expansion is needed to revitalize the economy, maintain employment, and expand the social safety net,” he argued. “It is time to open the barrier, not tighten the rein.”
Reporter Lee Hae-jun [email protected]