He cited President Yoon's handling of the country as one of the reasons for the ruling party's crushing defeat, and mentioned the "medical school enrollment quota issue" as a prime example. On the 11th, Rep. Ahn wrote on Facebook, "I think the public is saying, 'This is
"Until we reach the point where we think, 'Well then, it's fine,' we have no choice but to urge the government and ruling party to make a major shift in the tone of national politics and to innovate with a humble attitude."
He continued, "The government has decided to postpone the increase in the number of students in university medical schools for one year and to gradually increase the number of students, which has sparked public anger.
"Doctors should be able to return to their patients as soon as possible, and the government should also work on measures to secure essential medical personnel, doctors and scientists, laws to develop regional medical care, and adjustments to medical fees as a prerequisite for increasing staffing," he said.
"The dismissal of those responsible for unilaterally promoting the policy to increase the number of medical school staff is inevitable," said Rep. Ahn. "The government, doctors, patient associations, and others are all in a difficult position.
The OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) and other international organizations were given full authority to decide, without setting any predetermined figures, when and how much to increase staff, in a scientifically reasonable manner.
"The government and the ruling party should listen to the will of the people and embark on comprehensive reform," he said.
"We call for an introductory review by key members of the ruling party and government who were responsible for the party's disastrous defeat in the general election, and for a constructive relationship between the ruling party and government to be built," he said.
He continued, "The government has the executive power but is out of touch with the public, while the ruling party has single-seat constituency lawmakers who have an accurate grasp of public sentiment.
"When the government makes policies or personnel decisions that are out of step with the public's will, the ruling party can point this out and come up with a better alternative, which will create a synergistic effect for both parties," he said.
This is the law, and this is exactly what a constructive government-ruling party relationship is."
2024/04/12 08:12 KST
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