2004 Mongolian parliamentary election

2004 Mongolian parliamentary election

27 June 2004

All 76 seats in the State Great Khural
39 seats needed for a majority
Turnout81.84% ( 0.60 pp)
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
MPRP Nambaryn Enkhbayar 48.87 37 −35
MDC Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj 44.90 35 +32
Republican Bazarsadyn Jargalsaikhan 1.38 1 +1
Independents 3.41 3 +2
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Results by constituency
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Nambaryn Enkhbayar
MPRP
Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj
Democratic Party

Parliamentary elections were held in Mongolia on 27 June 2004.[1] Despite losing half of its seats to the opposition that was wiped out in the 2000 election, the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party (MPRP) won 36 out of 76 seats and remained as the largest party in the State Great Khural.

The Motherland Democratic Coalition (MDC) led by the newly founded Democratic Party (DP) won 34 out of 76 seats in the State Great Khural but failed to meet the threshold for a majority rule. 2 seats were disputed between the two parties, leaving them vacant until by-elections were held. A hung parliament was ultimately convened on 26 July 2004 and soon later a coalition government, headed by MDC chairman Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj, was formed.[2][3]

In the February 2005 by-elections, both the MPRP and the MDC each won a single seat in the 59th and 24th constituency.[4]

Background

In the previous parliamentary elections in 2000, the MPRP won 72 of the 76 seats in the State Great Khural. The opposition Democratic Union, comprising four parties that held a parliamentary majority with 50 seats from 1996 to 2000, suffered a major setback, winning only a single seat. Independent politician Lamjavyn Gündalai, the Motherland–Mongolian Democratic New Socialist Party (M–MNDSP), and the Civil Will Party also won one seat each.[5]

The opposition was fractured into twelve political parties and three coalitions that altogether nominated 560 candidates. No other party than the MPRP had obtained more than one seat in parliament.[5][6]

The electoral wipeout of the Democratic Union is attributed to their chaotic four years in government, political infighting, and the assassination of democratic revolutionary Sanjaasürengiin Zorig.[6] The latter, which led to the formation of a splinter Civil Will Party led by his sister, Sanjaasürengiin Oyun.[7]

On 6 December 2000, the five former member parties of the Democratic Union merged and established the Democratic Party of Mongolia (DP).[8] Independent MP Gundalai joined the DP in late 2000, increasing the number of Democratic seats from 1 to 2. The DP founded the Motherland Democratic Coalition with the M–MNDSP in May 2003. The Civil Will–Republican Party, a merger of the Civil Will Party and the Republican Party, would join the coalition later in July 2003.[9]

Electoral system

The members of the State Great Khural were elected from single-seat constituencies by a plurality voting method. The previous parliamentary elections of 1996 and 2000 were both held under the same system.[10]

Of the 76 seats, 20 were elected from the capital city, Ulaanbaatar, and the other 56 were elected from the 21 aimags of Mongolia.[10]

Timetable

The election timetable was approved by the General Election Commission (GEC) on 8 April, four days before the date of the election was announced.[11]

12 April Announcement of the election date
22 April Deadline for parties to submit intention to participate
27 April–17 May Parties nominate candidates
27 May The GEC issues candidate cards
27 May–25 June Election campaign period
20 June Deadline for the conduct of public opinion polling
28 June Polling day (from 7am until 10pm)

Contesting parties

Pre-election composition

PartySeats
Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party72
Democratic Party2
Motherland–Mongolian Democratic New Socialist Party1
Civil Will–Republican Party1
Total76
Source: State Great Khural

244 candidates were officially registered by the General Election Commission (GEC) for the election, of whom 15 were independents and 229 were running from 6 political parties and 1 coalition.[10][12]

PartyCandidates
Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party76
Motherland Democratic Coalition[a]76
Mongolian Party of National Unity23
Republican Party35
Mongolian Traditional United Party9
Mongolian Green Party5
Mongolian Liberal Party5
Independents15
Total244

Opinion polls

Polling firm Fieldwork date Sample
size
MPRP M-DC CW–RP Other Ind. None Und./NA/
DK
Sant Maral 18–25 May 2003 1,662 39 29 8 2 14 8
IRI 3 Jun 2003 1,000 35 31 6 1 1 25
16 Jul 2003 CW–RP joins the M-DC
IRI 3 Aug 2003 1,000 35 37 1 1 26
Sant Maral 24 Oct1 Nov 2003 1,703 35 39 2 14 9
IRI 3 Nov 2003 1,000 45 38 1 1 17
Sant Maral 4–12 Mar 2004 1,663 49 29 2 13 7
Sant Maral 30 May7 Jun 2004 2,170 47 36 4 5 8
2004 election 27 Jun 2004 48.8 44.9 2.8 3.5

Results

In the 24th and 59th constituencies, re-runs were held on 27 February 2005.

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party523,67748.8737–35
Motherland Democratic Coalition481,16644.9035+32
Republican Party14,8191.381+1
Mongolian Traditional United Party6,0970.570New
Mongolian Party of National Unity5,0970.480New
Mongolian Green Party2,1530.200
Mongolian Liberal Party2,0800.190New
Independents36,5433.413+2
Total1,071,632100.00760
Valid votes1,073,47198.55
Invalid/blank votes15,8451.45
Total votes1,089,316100.00
Registered voters/turnout1,330,99681.84
Source: General Election Commission[12]

Results by constituency

2004 Mongolian parliamentary election results by constituency
Province Constituency MPRP MDC RP MTUP MPNU MGP MLP Ind. Valid Invalid Electorate
Arkhangai 1 5,961 10,107 48 16,125 301 19,411
2 6,049 8,309 14,368 234 17,713
3 6,302 6,883 13,200 318 16,152
Bayan-Ölgii 4 6,729 8,203 116 15,065 284 19,503
5 6,118 7,199 65 235 13,654 355 15,516
6 7,146 8,324 15,476 324 17,169
Bayankhongor 7 8,104 5,464 13,584 239 17,622
8 5,461 6,205 39 54 80 11,847 173 13,840
9 5,084 6,704 11,798 239 13,545
Bulgan 10 9,031 5,147 14,191 282 17,415
11 8,569 4,156 12,730 163 15,527
Govi-Altai 12 9,229 5,649 14,892 177 16,355
13 7,812 6,293 118 14,235 192 16,460
Govisümber and Dornogovi 14 8,785 4,687 109 13,603 223 16,616
15 9,724 7,209 441 17,395 285 21,071
Dornod 16 4,087 3,417 543 8,054 88 9,766
17 6,245 7,208 54 13,519 172 16,297
18 5,088 5,195 912 11,195 179 13,779
Dundgovi 19 7,136 5,544 12,692 217 15,467
20 4,216 6,298 54 10,574 143 12,196
Zavkhan 21 5,904 6,051 11,961 118 14,049
22 7,575 4,753 12,335 179 14,293
23 3,626 1,131 164 4,570
3,812
13,311 153 14,856
Övörkhangai 24 6,236 6,288 12,542 222 16,591
25 3,633 7,773 134 11,544 151 14,321
26 7,170 4,698 11,875 294 14,460
27 6,544 7,826 14,380 362 17,150
Ömnögovi 28 5,381 6,922 12,324 75 14,131
29 5,429 5,774 11,214 161 13,003
Sükhbaatar 30 10,129 2,808 12,953 208 14,873
31 9,003 6,142 66 15,233 314 16,863
Selenge 32 6,555 8,500 126 54 15,243 207 18,378
33 7,503 6,853 14,369 261 18,494
34 6,205 6,241 37 46 12,538 214 15,327
Töv 35 6,328 4,954 278 11,575 194 15,615
36 3,985 3,106 189 561 7,846 111 10,599
37 5,307 3,697 78 9,086 155 12,786
38 5,780 3,267 233 9,293 171 12,368
Uvs 39 7,497 3,427 10,941 248 14,069
40 7,206 5,433 1,282 13,941 290 16,075
41 6,676 5,952 12,650 297 14,157
Khovd 42 4,996 4,192 2,326 11,543 126 13,780
43 7,758 5,691 48 13,472 270 15,139
44 6,946 6,188 657 13,791 308 15,181
Khövsgöl 45 4,526 7,984 12,521 192 16,086
46 6,307 6,786 13,104 174 16,095
47 5,810 8,507 59 36 14,422 181 17,664
48 5,901 10,015 45 15,980 243 19,641
Khentii 49 5,289 5,022 10,337 175 12,395
50 6,343 5,744 12,097 194 14,448
51 4,748 4,569 9,334 170 11,105
Darkhan-Uul 52 5,963 7,406 96 13,482 170 17,103
53 4,454 7,700 72 39 12,267 131 15,463
54 5,853 6,242 72 12,176 171 15,756
Orkhon 55 8,141 2,213 114 158 52 9,251
90
20,956 285 26,590
56 6,988 5,970 424 44 321 13,748 186 17,118
Ulaanbaatar 57 9,429 9,344 603 872 1,005 21,269 274 26,924
58 8,521 11,073 473 3,432 23,517 227 30,431
59 11,773 10,399 415 96 483 158
148
23,476 266 33,691
60 7,133 9,789 218 80 5,111
136
22,492 340 27,170
61 7,469 6,605 117 97 93 14,397 120 18,532
62 11,405 9,525 437 169 21,562 273 27,869
63 5,530 6,365 355 70 12,326 119 15,840
64 6,497 1,721 223 7,685 16,133 103 19,664
65 8,273 6,839 259 15,377 218 20,061
66 5,602 5,948 252 11,815 114 14,328
67 17,238 8,488 389 657 81 26,863 236 34,199
68 13,771 6,438 1,435 157 21,813 281 29,359
69 5,668 8,112 392 80 14,262 110 18,612
70 5,023 2,495 5,849 13,377 216 17,371
71 3,851 5,931 294 10,081 85 12,454
72 7,250 8,943 422 268 16,911 197 22,101
73 7,433 10,513 2,134 389 20,487 252 28,081
74 6,243 3,777 196 1,156 11,377 131 14,242
75 5,896 4,047 134 31 10,115 90 13,422
76 9,101 10,788 360 924 52 21,240 244 29,203
Total 523,677 481,166 14,819 6,097 5,097 2,153 2,080 36,543 1,073,471 15,845 1,330,996

Notes

References

  1. ^ Election Profile IFES
  2. ^ "Mongolia's Rival Parties Reach Power-Sharing Agreement - 2004-08-13". ཝི་ཨོ་ཨེ།. 2004-08-13. Retrieved 2025-08-26.
  3. ^ "Mongolia (07/07)". U.S. Department of State. Retrieved 2025-08-26.
  4. ^ Mongolia: Elections in 2004 IPU
  5. ^ a b Dieter Nohlen, Florian Grotz & Christof Hartmann (2001) Elections in Asia: A data handbook, Volume II, p490 ISBN 0-19-924959-8
  6. ^ a b Schafferer, Christian (2004-12-31). "The 2004 parliamentary election in Mongolia: Big surprises and small victories". Journal of Contemporary Eastern Asia. 3 (2): 1–6. doi:10.17477/jcea.2004.3.2.001. ISSN 2383-9449.
  7. ^ "Түүхэн товчоо". IZNN (in Mongolian). Retrieved 2025-09-06.
  8. ^ "Mongolia - Nomadic, Steppe, Pastoralism | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 2025-09-17. Retrieved 2025-09-17.
  9. ^ Wang Wei-fang: The Dissolution of Mongolia's Right-Wing Alliance following the 2004 Mongolian Parliamentary Election and its Impact Archived 2011-05-25 at the Wayback Machine Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission
  10. ^ a b c Schafferer, Christian (2005). "The Great State Hural election in Mongolia, June 2004" (PDF). Elsevier. Retrieved 2025-09-13.
  11. ^ "Монгол Улсын Их Хурлын сонгуулийн дүн" (PDF). General Election Commission of Mongolia (in Mongolian). p. 144. Retrieved 2025-09-18.
  12. ^ a b "Монгол улсын их хурлын сонгуулийн дүн" [Mongolian State Great Khural election results] (PDF), General Election Commission of Mongolia (in Mongolian), Ulaanbaatar, p. 152–177, 2022