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South Korea’s Ruling Party Sets Late-February Target for U.S. Investment Bill, Urges Bipartisan Deal

The push follows U.S. warnings of a tariff increase that Seoul says disregards its legislative process.

Overview

  • Democratic Party leaders say the Special Act will move through committee and subcommittee review for a plenary vote during an extraordinary session in late February to early March.
  • Floor leader Han Byung-do pressed for cross-party cooperation and warned that a failure to pass the bill could see tariffs return to 25%, estimating an annual 4 trillion won burden on the auto sector.
  • The legislation would implement the Lee–Trump summit commitments by executing MOUs and creating a strategic investment fund tied to a roughly US$350 billion investment program in U.S. projects.
  • Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan met U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick in Washington, describing the talks as inconclusive but helpful in clearing up “unnecessary misunderstandings.”
  • The ruling party is also expediting judicial reforms and a Commercial Act revision, including legislation to establish a Major Crimes Investigation Agency, while the opposition favors ratifying the joint fact sheet instead of enacting a special law.