Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On 18 December 2023, the ruling and opposition parties reached a consensus to redraw the electoral districts. [12] Subsequently, the State Great Khural's plenary session passed a resolution on the creation of 2024 regular election constituencies of the State Great Khural, and the determination of the number, territory of the mandates of the constituencies, resulting in the reformation of the ...
The Mongolian People's Party won with a supermajority of 62 seats, a slight drop from the 65 won in the prior elections. The centre-right Democratic Party won 11 seats. The candidate of Our Coalition, former State Great Khural member and vice chairperson of the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party Sainkhüügiin Ganbaatar, won a seat, as did candidate of the Right Person Electorate Coalition ...
Mongolia's ruling party won a much smaller majority in a parliamentary election than it had held previously, according to official results released on Monday, raising the possibility of a return ...
5th President of Mongolia, served in 2017-2021. The first person to serve as a member of parliament after the president's duty in Mongolian politics. Luvsantserengiin Enkh-Amgalan: 1970 Mongolian People's Party: 4th 2012 Dambyn Batlut: 1974 Mongolian People's Party: 2nd 2020 Bat-Ölziin Bat-Erdene: 1977 Mongolian People's Party: 1st 2024
Mongolia's governing party won parliamentary elections Friday but by only a slim margin as the opposition made major gains, according to tallies by the party and news media based on near-complete ...
Mongolia's first multi-party elections for the People's Great Khural (Upper Chamber of the Parliament) were held on 29 July 1990. The MPRP won 85% of the seats. The People's Great Khural first commenced on 3 September and elected a president (MPRP), a vice-president (SDP, Social Democratic Party), a prime minister (MPRP), and 50 members to the ...
The Cabinet of Ukhnaagiin Khürelsükh, was established following the 2017 Mongolian presidential election, and the election by the Mongolian parliament of Ukhnaagiin Khürelsükh to the office of the Prime Minister of Mongolia on 4 October 2017. [1] The cabinet was submitted for approval on 13 October, and sworn in on 18 October [2] [1]
Tsend Mönkh-Orgil or Tsendiin Mönkh-Orgil (Mongolian: Цэндийн Мөнх-Оргил; born 18 October 1964) is a Mongolian politician and a member of the State Great Hural. He is also the first person from Mongolia to join the United Nations International Law Commission as a member. [1]