Kim Yong-tae, a member of the People Power Party Emergency Response Committee born in 1990, noted during a broadcast speech on the 6th and 3rd presidential election platform and policy that 'our People Power Party reflects on the two presidential impeachments' and 'will certainly become a body that safeguards the constitutional spirit of the Republic of Korea.'
During a speech broadcast on MBC starting at 5:10 p.m. that day, Kim said, 'What the conservative government needs is the public's support for the public good, and the basic condition for gaining the public's support is the morality of a regime that respects the constitutional spirit.'
He said, 'Conservatives are the guardians of national security, protecting the very system of liberal democracy from communist dictatorship and are responsible for driving remarkable economic growth,' but he bowed his head, stating, 'We have been unable to adapt proactively to rapidly changing international circumstances and the altered domestic environment.'
'As a young conservative politician, it is painful,' he continued, stating that 'the People Power Party will break free from the stigma of maintaining the status quo and pursuing vested interests, and will embark on establishing the foundation for innovative growth through bold regulatory and labor reforms as well as education and science and technology reforms.'
Regarding youth policies, Kim stated, 'Policies that distribute money like basic income for young people only exacerbate the problem.' He added, 'What young people want is not to be subjects of charity or protection, but an environment and jobs where they can challenge themselves and work hard for the future,' emphasizing that political reform is necessary for this.
He pointed out that 'our politics has failed to contribute to a complex generation of history communicating and coexisting with each other to form a single community. Rather, the reality is that it only exacerbates conflicts among regions, classes, generations, and genders.'
Kim assessed that 'the constitutional system of 1987 over the past 38 years has deepened the structures of winner-takes-all through hostile coexistence between the left and right, conservatives and progressives, monopolization of vested interests, and the empowerment and secularization of the 586 movement.' He stressed that 'the next government must become a 'bridge government' that opens a new future.'
He particularly emphasized the necessity of constitutional amendment, stating, 'We must create a cooperative power structure that can end the imperial presidency, hostile factional politics, the confrontation between the president and the National Assembly, and confrontational politics.'
Kim concluded his speech by stating, 'The People Power Party will restore conservative politics led by a new future generation for a strong nation and the happiness of its people, and will certainly undertake the task of building a new Republic of Korea through national reform.'
Meanwhile, according to the Public Official Election Act, when a presidential vacancy election is confirmed, parties may deliver their platform and policy speeches a maximum of five times on TV and radio before the election period starts, with each speech not exceeding 10 minutes.