North Korea's rubber-stamp legislature has re-elected Kim Jong Un as president of state affairs, state media reported on Monday.
Kim's reappointment as head of the authoritarian nation's highest policymaking and governing body, the State Affairs Commission, was announced by the state news agency KCNA.
Critics argue that elections in North Korea are pre-determined and designed to give the country's leadership a veneer of democratic legitimacy.
"The Supreme People's Assembly of the DPRK reelected Comrade Kim Jong Un as President of the State Affairs of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea at the First Session, the first state affairs activity of its 15th term, on March 22," KCNA reported.
The report said the decision to re-elect Kim to the "top post" reflected "the unanimous will and desire of all the Korean people".
Kim is the third-generation ruler of the nuclear-armed state founded by his grandfather Kim Il Sung in 1948. He has ruled the country since his father's death in 2011.
The election is a "highly choreographed event with a pre-determined outcome", said Lee Ho‑ryung of the Korea Institute for Defense Analyses.
"Throughout the third-generation rule, the North has staged such events to showcase a procedure in an attempt to achieve political legitimacy," she said.
"But no one thinks any different outcome would emerge from it."
Photos released by KCNA show Kim dressed in a formal western suit and seated at the centre of a stage, flanked by top officials in front of two giant statues of his father Kim Jong Il and grandfather.
This picture taken on March 22, 2026 and released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on March 23, 2026 shows the First Session of the 15th Supreme People's Assembly at Mansudae Assembly Hall in Pyongyang. North Korea's rubber-stamp legislature has re-elected Kim Jong Un as president of state affairs, state media reported on March 23. (Credit: AFP)