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6월 1일 한겨레 그림판
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Chung Dong-young and president Roh Moo-hyun are hanging on to what they can. That used to be the ideal of being a party that represents the whole nation, and that party based much of its identity on not being a regional party like so many others. After Wednesday's elections, however, they are holding on to a "North Jeolla province party," the spelling of which is one character difference between "a national party." They're about to get hit with a massive wave titled "political restructuring," a term for the sometimes forced, sometimes unavoidable re-drawing of party lines, something that can lead to people changing party affiliation, the merging of two or more parties, a party split, or other such changes. (Hankyoreh Geurimpan 1 June 2006)