The president of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar (Burmese: နိုင်ငံတော်သမ္မတ, MLCTS: nuing ngam tau samma.ta.) is the head of state and constitutional head of government of Myanmar, which has a full presidential system. The president chairs the National Defence and Security Council and normally leads the Union Government (Cabinet), the executive branch of the Myanmar government, though leadership of the cabinet is being exercised by the prime minister during the current transition. Min Aung Hlaing, the head of the military as commander-in-chief of Defence Services since 2011 and Myanmar's ruler since 2021, has been exercising presidential duties on the NDSC on behalf of Acting President Myint Swe since a temporary order issued by Myint Swe on 22 July 2024. Myint Swe had himself been installed by Min Aung Hlaing through a military coup d'état on 1 February 2021. There is no constitutional mechanism for the transfer of presidential authority outside the order of succession, making the constitutionality of Myint Swe's order questionable according to legal experts. The position has been formally vacant since Myint Swe's death on 7 August 2025. The presidency is the most powerful position in the civilian leadership structure, though was largely symbolic under the 2021–2025 state of emergency, with the only presidential action having been to declare and extend the state of emergency and actual decision-making power vested in the chairman of the State Administration Council. Even when an elected civilian government is in place, the president has no command authority over the Tatmadaw, and his executive authority is counterbalanced by the significant governance powers of commander-in-chief of Defence Services.
| President of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar | |
|---|---|
| ပြည်ထောင်စု သမ္မတ မြန်မာနိုင်ငံတော် သမ္မတ | |
State seal of Myanmar | |
Flag of Myanmar | |
Incumbent since 7 August 2025Vacant | |
| Style | Mr. President (informal) His Excellency (formal) |
| Type | Head of state |
| Member of | Union Government (normally) National Defence and Security Council |
| Residence | Presidential Palace |
| Seat | Naypyidaw |
| Nominator | Assembly of the Union |
| Appointer | Presidential Electoral College |
| Term length | Five years, renewable once |
| Constituting instrument | Constitution of Myanmar |
| Precursor | Governor of Burma |
| Formation | 4 January 1948 |
| First holder | Sao Shwe Thaik |
| Deputy | Vice President |
| Salary | K5 million/US$ 2,385 per month |
| Website | www |
The president is elected by members of parliament, not by the general population; specifically the Presidential Electoral College, a three-committee body composed of members of parliament, elects the president. Each of the three committees, made up of Amyotha Hluttaw, Pyithu Hluttaw members of parliament, or military-appointed lawmakers, nominates a candidate for presidency.
After the 2015 election, the extraconstitutional post of State Counsellor of Myanmar was created for Aung San Suu Kyi, the leader of the majority party, the National League for Democracy, because she was ineligible for the presidency. She served as the de facto head of government until she was deposed in the 2021 coup d'état by Commander-in-Chief of Defence Services Min Aung Hlaing, who created the extraconstitutional posts of chairman of the State Administration Council and prime minister for himself to lead the government.
Leadership roles
The president is the head of state and head of government. The position of President was created in 1948, with the adoption of the Burmese Declaration of Independence from the United Kingdom. Since then, ten people have officially held the office. The office of the president was abolished twice when direct military rule was imposed by the coups of 1962 and 1988.
In the parliamentary system practised in 1948-1962, the Union President was the ceremonial head of state while prime minister is the actual head of government. The 1962 Coup abolished both offices of the Union President and Prime Minister, and the junta leader assumed the powers of both head of state and head of government as the Chairman of Revolutionary Council and Revolutionary Government.
The 1974 Constitution reintroduced the office with the title President of the Republic, to be held by the Chairman of the Council of State. Both of these positions were abolished again by the 1988 Coup where State Law and Order Restoration Council replaced them.
The 2008 Constitution introduced the presidential system, in which the president is both the head of state and the head of government. This presidential system was adopted upon the inauguration of former-general U Thein Sein as the first president under 2008 Constitution in 2011.
Qualifications
The Constitution of Myanmar sets the principle qualifications that the candidate must meet to be eligible for the office of the President. in Chapter 1: The President, Part I: The Federation of Myanmar in the Constitution of Myanmar. President has to be:
- A citizen of Myanmar.
- At least 45 years of age.
- Qualified to be elected as member of the National Assembly.
According to the Constitution of Myanmar, the president:
- shall be loyal to the Union and its citizens;
- shall be a citizen of Myanmar who was born of both parents who were born in the territory under the jurisdiction of the Union and being Myanmar Nationals;
- shall be an elected person who has attained at least the age of 45;
- shall be well acquainted with the affairs of the Union such as political, administrative, economic and military;
- shall be a person who has resided continuously in the Union for at least 20 years up to the time of his election as President
(Proviso: An official period of stay in a foreign country with the permission of the Union shall be counted as a residing period in the Union) - shall he himself, one of the parents, the spouse, one of the legitimate children or their spouses not owe allegiance to a foreign power, not be subject of a foreign power or citizen of a foreign country. They shall not be persons entitled to enjoy the rights and privileges of a subject of a foreign government or citizen of a foreign country;
- shall possess prescribed qualifications of the President, in addition to qualifications prescribed to stand for election to the Hluttaw.
Moreover, upon taking oath in office, the president is constitutionally forbidden from taking part in any political party activities (Chapter III, 64).
Powers and duties
Under the 2011 Constitution of Myanmar, the president is given the powers:
- To grant a pardon or amnesty.
- To appoint the Commander-in-Chief of Defence Services
- Declare a state of emergency with the approval from the National Defence and Security Council
- Appoint and remove Cabinet ministers
Election process
The president is not directly elected by Burmese voters; instead, they are indirectly elected by the Presidential Electoral College (သမ္မတရွေးချယ်တင်မြှောက်ရေးအဖွဲ့), an electoral body made of three separate committees. One committee is composed of MPs who represent the proportions of MPs elected from each Region or State; another is composed of MPs who represent the proportions of MPs elected from each township population; the third is of military-appointed MPs personally nominated by the Defence Services' commander-in-chief.
Each of the three committees nominates a presidential candidate. Afterward, all the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw MPs vote for one of three candidates—the candidate with the highest number of votes is elected president, while the other two are elected as vice-presidents. The president serves for a term of 5 years. Should a president resign for any reason or die in office, the Presidential Electoral College will meet and each of the three committees will nominate a candidate to finish out the prior President's term so that the terms of the legislature and presidency are synchronised. The candidate who receives the most votes from the nominees is elected.
This process is similar to the one prescribed by the 1947 Constitution, in which MPs from the Parliament's Chamber of Nationalities and Chamber of Deputies elected the president by secret ballot. The President was then responsible for appointing a prime minister (on the advice of the Chamber of Deputies), who was constitutionally recognised as the head of government and led the Cabinet.
History
Before independence, Myanmar had two quasi-constitutions, The government of Burma Act, 1935 and Constitution of Burma under Japanese occupation, 1943. After independence, Myanmar adopted three constitutions in 1947, 1974 and 2008. The 2008 constitution is the present constitution of Myanmar.
Before independence
Prior to 1863, different regions of modern-day Burma were governed separately. From 1862 to 1923, the colonial administration, housed in Rangoon's Secretariat building, was headed by a chief commissioner (1862–1897) or a lieutenant-governor (1897–1923), who headed the administration, underneath the governor-general of India.
From 31 January 1862 to 1 May 1897, British Burma was headed by a chief commissioner. The subsequent expansion of British Burma, with the acquisitions of Upper Burma and the Shan States throughout this period increased the demands of the position, and led to an upgrade in the colonial leadership and an expansion of government (Burma was accorded a separate government and legislative council in 1897).
Consequently, from 1 May 1897 to 2 January 1923, the province was led by a lieutenant governor. In 1937, Burma was formally separated from British India and began to be administered as a separate British colony, with a fully elected bicameral legislature, consisting of the Senate and House of Representatives. From 2 January 1923 to 4 January 1948, British Burma was led by a Governor, who led the cabinet and was responsible for the colony's defence, foreign relations, finance, and ethnic regions (Frontier Areas and Shan States). From 1 January 1944 to 31 August 1946, a British military governor governed the colony. During the Japanese occupation of Burma from 1942 to 1945, a Japanese military commander headed the government, while the British-appointed governor headed the colony in exile.
Burma became independent in 1948. There was a president from 1948 to 1962, and then 1974 and 1988. Between 1962 and 1974 and between 1988 and 2011, Burma was headed by military regimes. The office of the president was restored in 2011.
1947 Constitution
The 1947 constitution was drafted by Chan Htoon and was used from the country's independence in 1948 to 1962, when the constitution was suspended by the socialist Union Revolutionary Council, led by military general Ne Win. The national government consisted of three branches: judicial, legislative and executive. The legislative branch was a bicameral legislature called the Union Parliament, consisting of two chambers, the 125-seat Chamber of Nationalities (လူမျိုးစုလွှတ်တော် Lumyozu Hluttaw) and the Chamber of Deputies (ပြည်သူ့လွှတ်တော် Pyithu Hluttaw), whose seat numbers were determined by the population size of respective constituencies. The 1947 constitution was largely based on the 1946 Yugoslav Constitution, and several Burmese officials visited Yugoslavia.
1974 Constitution
Approved in a 1973 referendum, the 1974 constitution was the second constitution to be written. It created a unicameral legislature called the People's Assembly (Pyithu Hluttaw), represented by members of the Burma Socialist Programme Party The Constitution of the Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma. Each term was 4 years. Ne Win became the president at this time.
Between 1988 and 2008
Upon taking power in September 1988, the military based State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC) abolished the 1974 constitution. The SLORC called a constitutional convention in 1993, but it was suspended in 1996 when the National League for Democracy (NLD) boycotted it, calling it undemocratic. The constitutional convention was again called in 2004, but without the NLD. Myanmar remained without a constitution until 2008.
2008 Constitution
On 9 April 2008, the military government of Myanmar (Burma) released its proposed constitution for the country to be put to a vote in public referendum on 10 May 2008, as part of its roadmap to democracy. The constitution is hailed by the military as heralding a return to democracy, but the opposition sees it as a tool for continuing military control of the country.
2008 constitutional referendum
2012 by-elections
In spite of its earlier opposition to the 2008 constitution, the NLD participated in the 2012 by-election for 46 seats and won a landslide victory, with Aung San Suu Kyi becoming a member of parliament, alongside 42 others from her party.
2015 election
On 15 March 2016, the Assembly of the Union elected Htin Kyaw as the 9th president of Myanmar. He resigned on 21 March 2018 and Myint Swe became acting president.
On 28 March 2018, the Assembly of the Union elected Win Myint as the 10th president of Myanmar.
List of presidents of Myanmar
See also
- Myanmar
- Politics of Myanmar
- List of heads of state of Myanmar
- List of colonial governors of Burma
- List of presidents of Myanmar
- Vice President of Myanmar
- Prime Minister of Myanmar
- State Counsellor of Myanmar
- Lists of office-holders
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