The North Korean branch of the Union, the North Korea Democratic Women's League, was established on 18 November 1945 as part of an effort by the
North Korea Bureau of the Communist Party of Korea to enroll as many people as possible as members of communist-controlled
mass organizations in the northern part of the
Korean Peninsula. It was the first mass organization founded with a particular segment of the society in mind. Its initial task was to gather spontaneously formed regional women's organizations under its control. The Union held its first congress on 10 May 1946. At that time, it had 800,000 members in branches in 12
cities, 89
counties, and 616 townships. By the end of 1946, the League counted 1,030,000 members, or about one-fifth of women in the North. At its inception, the Union worked to enact laws regarding equality of the sexes as well as to bring women into politics. When the
North Korean local elections of 1946, the first democratic
elections in the country, approached, many men opposed women running for
People's Committee. In response,
Kim Il Sung enhanced the role of the Union. Some of the political goals of the Union had to do with supporting the communists rather than specifically focusing on women's issues. The Union platform consisted of supporting the
Provisional People's Committee for North Korea and Kim Il Sung for leadership of the country, as well as opposing "fascism", "traitors", feudal customs and superstition. Nominally, the Union represented the whole Peninsula but in reality it had little connections with women in the south. By 1947, the Union had 1.5 million members. The vast majority of them, some 73 percent, were peasants while 5.3 percent were workers, 0.97 percent were intellectuals, and the remaining 20 percent included all others, such as housewives. The North and South branches became merged on 20 April 1951. Official North Korean histories date the origins of the present organization to either December 1926 or January 1951, although both of these accounts are disputed. More recently, the Union has succeeded in increasing the number of women in manufacturing jobs. The early 2000s economic reforms, which allowed people to pursue profits, weakened the ideological reach of the Union, whose membership of housewives were now busy in the marketplace. Despite this, it remains one of the most important mass organizations in the country. At the Union's Sixth Congress on 17–18 November 2016, the name was changed to the Socialist Women's Union of Korea. ==Organization==