Jump to content

2020 Mongolian parliamentary election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2020 Mongolian parliamentary election
Mongolia
← 2016 24 June 2020 2024 →

All 76 seats in the State Great Khural
39 seats needed for a majority
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
MPP Ukhnaagiin Khürelsükh 44.93 62 −3
Democratic Erdene Sodnomzundui 24.49 11 +2
Our Coalition Nambaryn Enkhbayar 8.10 1 0
RPEC Badrakhyn Naidalaa 5.23 1 New
Independents 8.71 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Results by constituency
    MPP     Democratic
    Our Coalition     RPEC     Independent
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Ukhnaagiin Khürelsükh
MPP
Ukhnaagiin Khürelsükh
MPP

Parliamentary elections were held in Mongolia on 24 June 2020.[1][2] The result was a victory for the ruling Mongolian People's Party, which won 62 of the 76 seats, a slight decrease from the 65 won in the 2016 elections.

Electoral system

[edit]

The 76 members of the State Great Khural were elected by plurality-at-large voting in multi-member constituencies. The electoral system was not decided until a new electoral law was passed on 22 December 2019.[3] The changes were expected to marginalise smaller parties, and also effectively removed the right of 150,000 Mongolian expatriates to vote, as they could not be registered in a specific constituency.[3][4] The new electoral law also barred people found guilty of "corrupt practices" from standing in elections.[3] The proposal to re-introduce mixed proportional system[5] failed to garner enough support.

Women's right activists called for raising gender quota for nominations from 20% to 30% but they failed.[6] Currently, female MPs make up 17% (13 seats) in the parliament, the highest number since the first democratic elections in 1990.

Parties and coalitions

[edit]

606 candidates are officially registered by the General Election Committee of Mongolia running for the election, of whom 121 are independents and 485 candidates from following 13 political parties and 4 coalitions:[7]

Multiple candidates were arrested during the election campaign. Among them, two were running from the governing MPP, three were candidates of the opposition DP and one was a candidate of the Keep Order! Constitution 19 Coalition.[8][9]

Opinion polls

[edit]
Date Pollster MPP DP MPRP Coalition NC RP Other Undecided No party
June 2020 Sant Maral 45.2% 29.4% 14.0% 8.7% 2.7%

Results

[edit]

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 and Chairperson of the National Labour Party Togmidyn Dorjkhand. Former Prime Minister of Mongolia Norovyn Altankhuyag won one seat as an Independent candidate.[10]

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Mongolian People's Party1,795,79344.9362–3
Democratic Party978,89024.4911+2
Our Coalition323,6758.1010
United Coalition of Just Citizens213,8125.350New
Right Person Electorate Coalition209,1045.231New
Keep Order! Constitution 19 Coalition41,4171.040New
Mongolian Green Party23,4730.5900
Love the People Party18,5420.4600
People's Majority Party13,7200.340New
Demos Party8,7100.220
Freedom Implementing Party5,1420.1300
Ger Area Development Party4,1760.100New
Great Harmony Party4,1180.100New
Development Programme Party3,5210.090New
People's Party3,3330.080New
World Mongols Party5910.010New
United Patriots Party4480.0100
Independents348,0788.7110
Total3,996,543100.00760
Total votes1,475,895
Registered voters/turnout2,003,96973.65
Source: GEC, GEC, Ikon

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Mongolia: Election for Ulsyn Ikh Khural (Mongolian State Great Hural) IFES
  2. ^ "2020 Race Begins". Mongolia Weekly. Jan 19, 2020. Archived from the original on 2020-10-26. Retrieved 2020-01-19.
  3. ^ a b c Law on Elections amended Montsame, 24 December 2019
  4. ^ Mongolia's new election rules handicap smaller parties, clear way for two-horse race Archived 2016-07-01 at the Wayback Machine Reuters, 20 May 2016
  5. ^ Adiya, Amar (2019-06-07). "Mongolia Eyes to Change its Electoral Rules ahead of 2020 Elections". Mongolia Weekly. Retrieved 2023-04-08.
  6. ^ "Post". Mongolia Weekly. Retrieved 2019-12-29.
  7. ^ "606 candidates confirmed to run for 2020 parliamentary election". MONTSAME News Agency. 2020-06-02. Retrieved 2020-06-26.
  8. ^ Adiya, Amar (2020-06-18). "Arrest of Political Candidates Raise Democracy Concerns in Mongolia". Mongolia Weekly. Retrieved 2023-08-26.
  9. ^ Dugersuren, Sukhgerel (June 22, 2020). "Can Mongolia's elections shun democratic backsliding?".
  10. ^ "2020 Election: Ruling Mongolian People's Party wins 62 of 76 parliament seats". MONTSAME News Agency. 2020-06-25. Retrieved 2020-06-26.