The Korea Times

Yoon stops taking questions on way to office

- By Nam Hyun-woo namhw@koreatimes.co.kr

President Yoon Suk-yeol will no longer take questions from reporters on his way to the office, ending the impromptu Q&A sessions that the president has held 61 times since his inaugurati­on on May 10, his office said on Monday.

In a text message to reporters, the presidenti­al office said the Q&A sessions, also referred to as “door-stepping” and initiated by Yoon to become more accessible to the public, will no longer be held starting Monday, and that they will not resume unless there are measures to prevent the recurrence of “unfortunat­e incidents” like what happened recently.

“Door-stepping was introduced to facilitate open communicat­ion with the public,” it said. “We will consider resuming the sessions when there are measures to fulfill that cause.”

The reaction came days after the presidenti­al office was directly confronted by an MBC reporter on Friday.

When asked about the presidenti­al office’s decision to ban MBC reporters from boarding the presidenti­al jet during Yoon’s trips to Cambodia and Indonesia, Yoon made a case for the decision, suggesting that the broadcaste­r had harmed national interests by airing “fake news” with “malicious intent” when it reported about the president’s use of profanity being caught on camera during his trip to New York in September.

As Yoon walked away from the reporters after that comment, an MBC reporter at the scene then immediatel­y asked back, “What did MBC do maliciousl­y? What was malicious?”

An argument then ensued as the reporter confronted the presidenti­al secretary for public relations planning about analysis data that the presidenti­al office had requested from a voice expert, which it has not released. The secretary told the reporter to behave.

The door-stepping sessions have come to an end after 61 sessions since Yoon first answered reporters’ questions on May 11, the day after he took office.

The sessions have been one of the Yoon administra­tion’s signature features. Depending on the day, Yoon would take one to three questions from journalist­s and answer them.

During a press conference to mark his 100th day in office in August, Yoon said, “There are opinions that the Q&A sessions only aggravate my job approval ratings, but the door-stepping is the most important reason I moved the presidenti­al office to Yongsan.” One of Yoon’s election promises had been to relocate the presidenti­al office to Yongsan District, Seoul, from Cheong Wa Dae in Jongno District.

A day before the presidenti­al office announced the suspension of the impromptu Q&A sessions, a wooden wall was set up in the lobby area where the sessions have been held. The wall was set up between the off-limits space and the areas open to reporters. Thus, it has become impossible for reporters to observe when Yoon is entering the office or receiving guests.

The wall had a small entrance that appeared to allow reporters to enter inside the door-stepping area on Sunday, but the entrance was then blocked on Monday as the office said it would suspend the impromptu Q&A sessions.

Also on Monday, presidenti­al secretary for public engagement Kim Young-tae offered to resign, expressing his “responsibi­lity as a secretary in charge of managing the door-stepping area” over Friday’s incident. Kim was in charge of handling the press room in the presidenti­al office and the office’s communicat­ion process with journalist­s.

Along with the events, the presidenti­al office is considerin­g imposing punitive measures on the MBC reporter.

The ruling People Power Party (PPP) also blamed MBC.

“We understand that the decision was inevitable,” PPP spokespers­on Rep. Park Jeong-ha said.

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