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No, Mongolia became a bourgeoisie democracy in 1990. The Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party abandoned ''Marxism Leninism'' for capitalism. Yet the Mongolian people remained royal to the party. The first democratic elections were won by the MPRP. The now pro-capitalist MRRP was only defeated in 1996, when right-wing democrats won the elections.

In 2010 the MPRP removed the name ''revolutionary'' from its name. The new Mongolian People's Party is now a full pro-capitalist party, with no Marxist ideology.

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12y ago
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14y ago

No.

Well, you didn't say you wanted a detailed answer...

But if you DID, Mongolia is technically a parliamentary democracy, with 18 being the voting age. A common example of another parliamentary democracy is Britain.

Like many governments, including the US government, there are the Judicial, Legislative, and Executive branches.

The legislative branch is unicameral (as opposed to bicameral as we have in the US with the House of Representatives and the Senate; or in Britain, as they have the House of Lords and House of Commons, another bicameral system), consisting of 76 members who are popularly elected to 4-year terms.

The Executive branch has a Prime Minister and a President (akin to other parliamentary democracies).

The Judicial Branch oversees the courts and there is a Supreme Court. Though the members are approved by the President, they are not appointed by him.

There are two main political parties, the Democratic Party (DP) and the Mongolian People's Revolution Party (MPRP). MPRP dominates the legislature currently with 45 out of 76 seats.

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