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In defeat, SKorean president to let parliament choose her PM

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - South Korea's president says she will allow parliament to choose her prime minister as she tries to defuse an escalating influence-peddling scandal.

The announcement Tuesday by Park Geun-hye is a major concession that could severely curtail her ability to govern in the year she has left in her term.

The prime minister Park nominated last week as a way to settle growing anger will apparently be replaced. But opposition and ruling party lawmakers must first agree on someone else.

Earlier Tuesday prosecutors raided the Seoul office of Samsung Electronics in connection with the scandal. The Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office said the raid was part of investigation into the scandal centering on how much Park's longtime confidante Choi Soon-sil meddled in state affairs though she was not a government employee.

South Korean President Park Geun-hye, third from left front, arrives as the opposition party's lawmakers holding signs reading "President Park Geun-hye Step Down" upon her arrival to meets with National Assembly Speaker Chung Sye-kyun at the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2016. South Korean prosecutors have raided the Seoul office of Samsung Electronics in connection with a snowballing influence-peddling scandal involving President Park Geun-hye's longtime confidante. (Bae Jae-man/Yonhap via AP) The Associated Press