Gombojavyn Zandanshatar Explained

Gombojavyn Zandanshatar
Office1:Chairman of the State Great Khural
Term Start1:1 February 2019
Term End1:2 July 2024
President1:Khaltmaagiin Battulga
Ukhnaagiin Khürelsükh
Predecessor1:Miyeegombyn Enkhbold
Successor1:Amarbayasgalan Dashzegve
Office2:Chief Cabinet Secretary
Term Start2:2017
Term End2:2 February 2019
Predecessor2:Jamyangiin Mönkhbat
Successor2:Oyunerdene Luvsannamsrai
Office3:Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade
President3:Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj
Primeminister3:Sanjaagiin Bayar
Sükhbaataryn Batbold
Term Start3:September 2009
Term End3:August 2012
Predecessor3:Sukhbaataryn Batbold
Successor3:Luvsanvandan Bold
Office4:Member of the State Great Khural
Term Start4:5 July 2016
Term End4:2 July 2024
Term Start5:2008
Term End5:2012
Term Start6:2004
Term End6:2008
Birth Date:18 March 1970
Birth Place:Baatsagaan, Bayankhongor Province, Mongolia
Party:Mongolian People's Party

Gombojav Zandanshatar (; born 18 March 1970) is a Mongolian politician. He is a member of the Mongolian People's Party,[1] and served as Party General Secretary from 2012 to 2013.[2] Zandanshatar currently serves as Mongolian President's chief of staff.[3]

He was the Chairman of the State Great Khural, the Parliament of Mongolia, from 2019 till 2024. He previously served as the Chief of Cabinet Secretariat of the Government of Mongolia (2017–2019), Minister for Foreign Affairs (2009–2012) and Deputy Minister of Food and Agriculture (2003–2004).[4] [5]

He was first elected to the State Great Khural in June 2004, thus starting his service as lawmaker. Altogether, he served four terms as a Member of Parliament in 2004–2008, 2008–2012, 2016–2020 and 2020-2024.

Biography

Early career

Zandanshatar’s early career started as Lecturer in the College of trade and industry (1992–1995), after which he worked at the Agricultural Bank of Mongolia, progressively on different positions as Economist, Restructuring manager, Director of Forex department, Director of Loan and Monetary Policy department (1995–1998).

Then he was appointed as the member of Receivership Team by the Central Bank of Mongolia at Agricultural Bank and later, after its restructuring, was promoted to Deputy Director of the bank (1998–2003). As a result of restructuring and reorganization the bank was recapitalized and successfully privatized in 2003.

Statesman

Deputy Minister of food and agriculture (2003–2004)

The agricultural sector of the country was in serious crisis, especially the state of crop farming and flour production were in despair. Zandanshatar actively worked to mobilize state support and attract foreign aid to the sector. His Ministry’s team drafted state policy on farming and agriculture which was later adopted by Parliament.  This work laid the foundation for “Atar III” campaign work that revived wheat and crop farming in Mongolia.

Minister of Foreign Affairs (2009–2012)

During his tenure, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has been tasked to prioritize economic relations in foreign affairs. Subsequently, the country renewed its Foreign Policy vision in 2011, for the first time after 17 years. Also, from 2011 to 2013 Mongolia chaired the Community of Democracies.

As Minister, his schedule comprised official visits to almost 20 countries such as U.S.A., Japan, P.R. of China, South Korea, Italy, Germany, etc.  He also started work to upgrade Mongolian-Japanese relations from Comprehensive partnership to Strategic partnership.

Zandanshatar took a series of measures to improve the ethics, discipline, and responsibility of diplomats at all levels.

Chief of the Cabinet secretariat of the Government of Mongolia (2017–2019)

As Chief of Cabinet Secretariat, Zandanshatar worked tirelessly on government priorities, which were to establish fair, transparent, and accountable structure for public officials and to strengthen the responsibilities and regulations on all levels of government agencies. An updated Law of Public Service was adopted by the Parliament in 2018 to be adhered to starting from 2019.

He summarized all development policies and resolutions issued until that time into the “Three pillars development policy” encompassing areas of public service reform, social reform, and economic reform.

Other notable achievements during his tenure include strong anti-corruption measures taken against illegal privatization of large mining enterprises and a 50 percent improvement in air quality of Ulaanbaatar as a result of implementing smokeless fuel supply to households.

Chairman (Speaker) of State Great Khural, the Parliament of Mongolia (2019–present)

In 2019, his predecessor, Miyeegombyn Enkhbold, was ousted after numerous demonstrations by his political opponents, and Gombojavyn Zandanshatar was proposed and later elected unanimously by the Members of the Parliament as Chairman (Speaker).

As Chairman he brought to successful completion the historic Constitutional Amendment process.  The current Constitution of Mongolia was adopted in 1992 and since then, changes were necessitated by the socio-economic development of the country.  Amendments to the main law were discussed throughout the last three terms of Parliament and Zandanshatar was an active force in the process of studying and preparing draft amendments.  An important step in the discussion and drafting of the amendments was made in 2015 by way of introducing deliberative democracy and deliberative polling methods that Zandanshatar studied in depth while he worked as visiting scholar and fellow at Stanford University. He introduced this methodology of enabling citizens’ participation in main political changes and reaching political consensus in Mongolia.  

Based upon the opinions of the Mongolian people that have been expressed by Mongolia's Law on Deliberative Polling, the Parliament of Mongolia under the chairmanship of Zandanshatar has successfully adopted the Amendments to the Constitution on the 14th of November, 2019.

Education

Zandanshatar graduated from Baikal State University in 1992 (formerly Institute of National Economy in Soviet Union with a diploma of Specialist in Finance. He also earned a Master’s degree in Economics and Finance (1992) from Baikal State University.

He is the recipient of Honorary Professorship from his alma-mater Baikal State University (2011), Mongolian University of Science and Technology (2019), and Ikh Zasag University (2019).

In 2014–2015 and 2016, Zandanshatar was a visiting scholar at the Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law at Stanford University in California. He was impressed by the concept of deliberative polling developed by the center's director, James Fishkin, and translated his book on it, When the People Speak, into Mongolian. In 2017 the country officially adopted deliberative polling as a condition for constitutional changes.[6]

Personal life

Zandanshatar married his wife Ganbayaryn Otgongerel in 1992, together they have four children.

Significance of Constitutional Amendments of 2019

Further development of parliamentary democracy and the guarantee of peoples’ power to govern

Amendments regarding Executive power

Amendments ensuring judicial independence, increase accountability of judges/arbiters

Amendments on local administration

Notes and References

  1. Lucy Hornby, "Mongolia: Living from loan to loan", Opinion, Financial Times, September 12, 2016.
  2. http://cddrl.fsi.stanford.edu/people/zandanshatar_gombojav "Zandanshatar Gombojav"
  3. Web site: Weekly . Mongolia . 2024-07-12 . MPP’s Game of Succession . 2024-07-15 . Mongolia Weekly.
  4. Web site: Гадаад харилцааны сайд . 2017-07-31 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121016173027/http://mfat.gov.mn/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=44&Itemid=66&lang=en . 2012-10-16 . dead .
  5. Web site: Gombojav ZANDANSHATAR . 2017-07-31 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120927014234/http://www.un.int/mongolia/Archives/2009/Said%20Zandanshatar%20english_.htm . 2012-09-27 . dead .
  6. Milenko Martinovich, "Collaboration at Stanford leads to Mongolian parliament passing law on public opinion polling", News, Stanford University, May 2, 2017.