Draft Resolution “2024-2028 Strategic Plan of the State Great Hural” Submitted to Chairman D. Amarbayasgalan

Today, an initiative led by Deputy Chairwoman Kh. Bulgantuya submitted the draft resolution of the State Great Hural’s “2024-2028 Strategic Plan” to Chairman D. Amarbayasgalan for review.


According to Article 4.8 of the Law on the State Great Hural of Mongolia, “The State Great Hural shall approve and implement its strategic plan.” Accordingly, by Chairman D. Amarbayasgalan’s 2024 Order No. 71, a working group was established under the leadership of Deputy Chairwoman Kh. Bulgantuya to draft the resolution for the “2024-2028 Strategic Plan of the State Great Hural.”


The working group examined best practices from the Inter-Parliamentary Union and other nations, assessed the implementation of the 2019-2024 strategic plan, reviewed public opinion on the State Great Hural’s operations, and consulted with scholars in two major discussions. Based on these inputs, the group developed the strategic plan for the next four years.

The central theme of this strategic plan is a “human-centered parliament.” This emphasis signifies that all policies and actions of the State Great Hural will prioritize the needs, participation, and rights of citizens. At every stage—policy creation, representation, proposal submission, discussion, approval, implementation oversight, and reporting—the plan aims to address citizens’ needs, ensure human rights and freedoms, and encourage active public involvement. The strategic plan outlines five primary goals and seventeen objectives.


Chairman D. Amarbayasgalan highlighted the importance of multi-party collaboration, noting that representatives from all five parties and coalitions in the State Great Hural participated in formulating the 2024-2028 strategic plan. He emphasized that this new parliament will work to further strengthen human-centered principles that uphold human rights and freedoms. Additionally, he noted that legal reforms are planned to clarify regulatory frameworks, ensuring that standards are governed by law and that procedural matters are clearly regulated.

 

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