Parliament Votes to Remove Speaker Uchral, Clearing Path to Prime Ministership www.montsame.mn
State Great Khural on March 30 voted to relieve Uchral Nyam-Osor of his duties as Speaker of Parliament, formally clearing the way for his nomination as Prime Minister following a week of rapid political change in Ulaanbaatar.
The Parliament's Standing Committee on State Structure held a session earlier in the day at which Uchral presented his own resignation request. "The Mongolian People's Party congress has made a political decision to nominate me as a candidate for Prime Minister," he said. "Therefore, I am submitting my request to be relieved of my duties as Speaker in order to ensure political stability, preserve parliamentary immunity, and place the national interest above all else." All 20 committee members present voted in favour. Deputy Speaker Bat-Erdene Jadamba was instructed to serve as acting Speaker until a successor is elected.
The full Parliament is expected to vote on Uchral's appointment as Prime Minister within days. If confirmed, the 39-year-old — born January 2, 1987 — would become the second-youngest Prime Minister in Mongolia's democratic history, after Elbegdorj Tsakhia, who served in the role in 1998 at the age of 35.
The events on Monday follow a sequence of developments that began last week. On March 27, Parliament accepted the resignation of Prime Minister Zandanshatar Gombojav, who had held the post for nine months after taking office following the removal of his predecessor amid a no-confidence vote last May. Zandanshatar told Parliament he was stepping down voluntarily. "I am not seeking to hold my position," he said. "Therefore, I am stepping down, prioritizing the interests of the country." Seventy-four percent of members voted to accept his resignation. He will continue in an acting capacity until a new Prime Minister is appointed.
In his final address to Parliament, Zandanshatar presented an account of his government's economic record, noting that coal exports reached 90 million tons and total exports hit 15.8 billion USD in 2025. He said economic growth rose from 2.6 to 6.8 percent, inflation fell from 8.3 to 6.5 percent, and foreign currency reserves reached a historic high of 7 billion USD — an increase of 2.1 billion USD. His tenure was defined by a fiscal austerity drive that cut budget expenditures by 2.2 trillion MNT, and his final act in office included overseeing a deliberative polling process on Mongolia's National Wealth Fund.
Zandanshatar's resignation came under compounding pressure: with his two ministers resigning, and the opposition Democratic Party had boycotted Parliament sessions since earlier this month.
On 29 March, at the MPP's third party conference session, Secretary-General Sodbaatar Yangug formally introduced Uchral's nomination for Prime Minister. After 32 conference members posed questions on political, social, and economic matters, a secret ballot was held. Of 421 members present out of 597, the resolution backing Uchral's nomination passed with 99.7 percent of the vote.
Uchral, who holds degrees in law, history, and business administration, first joined the MPP in 2009 and is regarded as a consensus figure capable of bridging factional divisions within the party.
The incoming Prime Minister will face a demanding agenda: resolving the Democratic Party's parliamentary boycott, managing an economy under strain from global energy market disruptions, and consolidating the fiscal gains of his predecessor while addressing persistent public concerns over governance and corruption.
Published Date:2026-03-30





