Nambaryn Enkhbayar (born June 1, 1958, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia) is a Mongolian politician who served as prime minister (2000–04), speaker of parliament (2004–05), and president (2005–09) of Mongolia. He was the first person to have held all three of Mongolia’s top leadership posts.
Enkhbayar received a B.S. in literature and language in 1980 from the Literature Institute in Moscow. He later completed a training course in English literature and language at Leeds University in England. From 1980 to 1990 he worked for the Association of Mongolian Writers as a translator, editor, head of department, and executive secretary; during the same period he also served as vice president of the Mongolian Translators and Interpreters’ Union. He has translated into Mongolian many works by important Russian and English authors, including Leo Tolstoy, Charles Dickens, Aldous Huxley, and Virginia Woolf.
Enkhbayar’s political career began in 1990, when he became first vice chairman of the Mongolian government’s Culture and Art Development Committee. In 1992, following the collapse of communism in Mongolia, he was elected to the country’s parliament, the State Great Hural, later serving as minister of culture (1992–96). In 1997 he was elected chairman of the formerly communist Mongolian People’s Revolutionary Party (MPRP), once the sole legal political party in Mongolia; he held the post until 2005. With the party’s victory in parliamentary elections in 2000 he became prime minister. After the MPRP failed to win a parliamentary majority in elections in 2004, Enkhbayar was elected speaker of the Great Hural. He was elected president of Mongolia in 2005.
After taking office, Enkhbayar presided over a volatile political situation that included violent protests over government corruption and the outcome of legislative elections in 2008. He drew criticism for his handling of the unrest, which included declaring a state of emergency that lasted for several days in July 2008. The following year Enkhbayar was defeated by Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj in the presidential election.
Enkhbayar remained involved in politics, and in 2010 he founded the Mongolian People’s Revolutionary Party, taking the name of the former MPRP. Two years later, however, he was arrested on corruption allegations that stemmed from his time as president. Enkhbayar claimed that the charges were politically motivated. He was convicted in 2012 and was ultimately sentenced to 30 months, but in 2013 he was pardoned by Pres. Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj. However, Enkhbayar was barred from holding office until late 2017, and, when he sought to enter that year’s June election, his candidacy was rejected.