SEOUL President Joe Biden is tending to both business and security interests Sunday as he wraps up a three-day visit to South Korea, showcasing Hyundai’s pledge to build a $5.5 billion electric vehicle and battery factory in Georgia and visiting U.S. and South Korean troops monitoring the rapidly evolving North Korean nuclear threat.
Biden's meeting with Hyundai's chief comes after the president made an earlier stop at a computer chip plant run by Samsung, the Korean electronics giant that plans to build a $17 billion production facility in Texas.
A Supreme Court opinion draft overturning Roe v. Wade prompted elected officials and candidates running for offices during the 2022 midterm elections to chime in on the issue.