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Premier of North Korea

Head of government of North Korea


Head of government of North Korea

FieldValue
postPremier
bodythe Cabinet of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea
native_name조선민주주의인민공화국 내각총리
insigniaEmblem of North Korea.svg
insigniasize100px
insigniacaptionEmblem of North Korea
flagFlag of North Korea.svg
flagsize125px
flagcaptionFlag of North Korea
imagesize200px
incumbentPak Thae-song
incumbentsince29 December 2024
departmentCabinet of North Korea
typeHead of government
member_ofCabinet
nominatorSupreme People's Assembly
appointerSupreme People's Assembly
termlengthFive years, renewable
inauguralKim Il Sung
formation
deputyVice Premier

The premier of North Korea, officially the premier of the Cabinet of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, is the head of government of North Korea and leader of the North Korean Cabinet.

The premier is officially appointed by the Supreme People's Assembly (SPA), which also appoints other members of the Cabinet on the nomination of the premier. The premier organizes and leads the Cabinet, and constitutionally represents the government of North Korea. The incumbent premier is Pak Thae-song, since 29 December 2024.

History

Originally, under the 1948 Constitution of the DPRK, the Premier was the highest state post in North Korea. Kim Il Sung himself inaugurated the post, keeping it for 24 years until 1972, while the ceremonial role of the head of state rested in the Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Supreme People's Assembly.

The 1972 Constitution created the post of President, which replaced the premiership as the top state post. The executive presidency was created with Kim in mind, and he transferred to that post soon after the Constitution was promulgated. The Premier was now the head of the Administration Council, but most of the powers of the former cabinet were passed to the Central People's Committee, the highest ruling council chaired by the president himself. The first premier after Kim Il Sung was his long-time ally Kim Il. The post was then officially known as Premier of the Administration Council (정무원 총리, jungmuwon chongni).

After Kim Il Sung died, the post of president remained vacant (officially Kim Il Sung was proclaimed Eternal President) as his son Kim Jong Il planned a new State reorganization. A constitution revision in 1998 abolished both the Central People's Committee and the Administration Council, re-creating the Cabinet.

Functions

The premier is officially elected by the Supreme People's Assembly (SPA), which also has the right to recall the premier. The premier also nominates the candidacies for other members of the Cabinet, including vice premiers, the cabinet chairman, various ministers and other cabinet members, which are then appointed by the SPA. A newly-appointed premier takes an oath of allegiance in the SPA on behalf of other cabinet members.

The premier organizes and oversees the cabinet, and represents the government of North Korea. The premier also attends the plenary meetings and the permanent committee meetings of the Cabinet. The cabinet is charged with executing the policies decided by the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea and the office effectively has no policy-making authority of its own.

Until 2019, the Premier was nominally part of a triumvirate overseeing North Korea's executive branch, alongside the Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Supreme People's Assembly and the President of the State Affairs Commission. According to the constitution, the SAC President, SPA Standing Committee chairman and Premier had powers equivalent to one-third of those of a president's powers in most presidential systems. The SPA Standing Committee chairman conducted foreign relations, the premier handled domestic matters and headed the government, and the SAC President (known as the chairman of the National Defence Commission before 2016) commanded the armed forces. However, the SAC President is constitutionally defined as "the highest post in the state" and the country's supreme leader. In 2019, however, the SAC President was formally defined as the country's head of state.

The Premier ranked as the lowest member of the executive triumvirate: significantly, Kim Jong Il was NDC Chairman without interruption from 1993 until 2011, and Kim Yong-nam was President of the SPA Presidium from 1998 to 2019, while there have been six premiers since Kim Il Sung's death. Kim Tok Hun, the incumbent Premier, has assumed the second-ranking position, while Choe Ryong-hae, Chairman of the SPA Standing Committee, is currently ranked third.

List of office holders

The following is a list of premiers of North Korea since its founding in 1948.

No.PortraitName
(Birth–Death)Term of officePartyHead of stateSPATook officeLeft officeTime in officePremier of the Cabinet
내각 수상Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Premier of the Administration Council
정무원 총리Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Premier of the Cabinet
내각총리Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"Workers' Party of Korea}};"
**1**[[File:Kim Il Sung Portrait 1966.png100px]]**Kim Il Sung**
김일성
(1912–1994)9 September
194828 December
1972Workers' Party of North Korea
(until 1949)**Kim Tu-bong**
(1948–1957)[1st](1st-supreme-people-s-assembly-of-north-korea)
Workers' Party of Korea
(from 1949)
**Choe Yong-gon**
(1957–1972)[2nd](2nd-supreme-people-s-assembly)
[3rd](3rd-supreme-people-s-assembly)
[4th](4th-supreme-people-s-assembly)
**2**[[File:KimIl1974.jpg100px]]**Kim Il**
김일
(1910–1984)28 December
197230 April
1976Workers' Party of Korea**Kim Il Sung**
(1972–1994)[5th](5th-supreme-people-s-assembly)
**3**[[File:Pak Sŏngch'ŏl, June 1973.jpg100px]]**Pak Song-chol**
박성철
(1913–2008)30 April
197615 December
1977Workers' Party of Korea
**4**[[File:Li Jong-ok.jpg100px]]**Ri Jong-ok**
리종옥
(1916–1999)15 December
197725 January
1984Workers' Party of Korea[6th](1977-north-korean-parliamentary-election)
[7th](1982-north-korean-parliamentary-election)
**5**[[File:Blank.svg100px]]**Kang Song-san**
강성산
(1931–2000)25 January
198429 December
1986Workers' Party of Korea
**6**[[File:Blank.svg100px]]**Ri Kun-mo**
리근모
(1926–2001)29 December
198612 December
1988Workers' Party of Korea[8th](1986-north-korean-parliamentary-election)
**7**[[File:Blank.svg100px]]**Yon Hyong-muk**
연형묵
(1931–2005)12 December
198811 December
1992Workers' Party of Korea
[9th](1990-north-korean-parliamentary-election)
**(5)**[[File:Blank.svg100px]]**Kang Song-san**
강성산
(1931–2000)11 December
199221 February
1997Workers' Party of Korea
*Vacant*
(1994–1998)
**–**[[File:Blank.svg100px]]**Hong Song-nam**
홍성남
(1929–2009)
*Acting Premier*21 February
19975 September
1998Workers' Party of Korea
**8**[[File:Blank.svg100px]]**Hong Song-nam**
홍성남
(1929–2009)
5 September
19983 September
2003Workers' Party of Korea**Kim Yong-nam**
(1998–2019)[10th](10th-supreme-people-s-assembly)
**9**[[File:Blank.svg100px]]**Pak Pong-ju**
박봉주
(born 1939)
3 September
200311 April
2007Workers' Party of Korea[11th](11th-supreme-people-s-assembly)
**10**[[File:Blank.svg100px]]**Kim Yong-il**
김영일
(born 1944)
11 April
20077 June
2010Workers' Party of Korea
[12th](2009-north-korean-parliamentary-election)
**11**[[File:Blank.svg100px]]**Choe Yong-rim**
최영림
(born 1930)
7 June
20101 April
2013Workers' Party of Korea
**(9)**[[File:Blank.svg100px]]**Pak Pong-ju**
박봉주
(born 1939)
1 April
201311 April
2019Workers' Party of Korea
[13th](2014-north-korean-parliamentary-election)
**12****Kim Jae-ryong**
김재룡
(born 1959)
11 April
201913 August
2020Workers' Party of Korea**Kim Jong Un**
(since 2019)[14th](2019-north-korean-parliamentary-election)
**13**[[File:2024年金徳訓 2024년김덕훈.jpgframeless134x134px]]**Kim Tok-hun**
김덕훈
(born 1961)
13 August
202029 December
2024Workers' Party of Korea
**14**[[File:Pak Thae-song in Moscow (cropped).jpgframeless164x164px]]**Pak Thae-song**
박태성
(born 1955)
29 December
2024IncumbentWorkers' Party of Korea

Timeline

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Define $today =

Colors = id:nkwp value:red legend:Workers'_Party_of_North_Korea id:kwp value:rgb(0.84,0.08,0.22) legend:Workers'_Party_of_Korea

id:gray1 value:gray(0.85) id:gray2 value:gray(0.95)

DateFormat = dd/mm/yyyy Period = from:09/09/1948 till:$today TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:5 start:1950 ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:1 start:1949

Legend = columns:1 left:150 top:35 columnwidth:170

TextData = pos:(20,38) textcolor:black fontsize:M text:"Political party:"

BarData = bar:il-sung bar:kim-il bar:song-chol bar:jong-ok bar:song-san bar:kun-mo bar:hyong-muk bar:song-nam bar:pong-ju bar:yong-il bar:yong-rim bar:jae-ryong bar:tok-hun bar:tae-song

PlotData = width:5 align:left fontsize:9 shift:(5,-4) anchor:till

bar: il-sung from: 09/09/1948 till: 24/06/1949 color:nkwp from: 24/06/1949 till: 28/12/1972 color:kwp text:"Kim Il Sung" bar: kim-il from: 28/12/1972 till: 30/04/1976 color:kwp text:"Kim Il" bar: song-chol from: 30/04/1976 till: 15/12/1977 color:kwp text:"Pak Song-chol" bar: jong-ok from: 15/12/1977 till: 25/01/1984 color:kwp text:"Ri Jong-ok" bar: song-san from: 25/01/1984 till: 29/12/1986 color:kwp bar: kun-mo from: 29/12/1986 till: 12/12/1988 color:kwp text:"Ri Kun-mo" bar: hyong-muk from: 12/12/1988 till: 11/12/1992 color:kwp text:"Yon Hyong-muk" bar: song-san from: 11/12/1992 till: 21/02/1997 color:kwp text:"Kang Song-san" bar: song-nam from: 21/02/1997 till: 03/09/2003 color:kwp text:"Hong Song-nam" bar: pong-ju from: 03/09/2003 till: 11/04/2007 color:kwp bar: yong-il from: 11/04/2007 till: 04/06/2010 color:kwp text:"Kim Yong-il" bar: yong-rim from: 04/06/2010 till: 01/04/2013 color:kwp text:"Kang Song-san" bar: pong-ju from: 01/04/2013 till: 11/04/2019 color:kwp text:"Pak Pong-ju" bar: jae-ryong from: 11/04/2019 till: 13/08/2020 color:kwp text:"Kim Jae-ryong" bar: tok-hun from: 13/08/2020 till: 29/12/2024 color:kwp text:"Kim Tok-hun" bar: tae-song from: 29/12/2024 till: $today color:kwp text:"Park Tae-song"

References

References

  1. "Socialist Constitution".
  2. Weiser, Martin. (2022-08-01). "North Korea’s premier now ranks as top official. Is he Kim Jong Un’s successor?".
  3. (5 September 1998). "Election for state leadership organs".
  4. (4 September 2003). "Members of DPRK Cabinet Appointed".
  5. (12 April 2007). "5th Session of 11th SPA of DPRK Held".
  6. (7 June 2010). "Choe Yong Rim Elected PM".
  7. (1 April 2013). "Seventh Session of 12th SPA of DPRK Held".
  8. (9 April 2014). "Members of DPRK Cabinet Appointed".
  9. (12 April 2019). "First Session of 14th SPA Held".
  10. (14 August 2020). "New Premier of DPRK Cabinet Appointed".
  11. (29 December 2024). "Press Release of Eleventh Plenary Meeting of Eighth C.C., WPK".
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