The Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party (MPRP) () was a political party in Mongolia which was founded in 2010 by former president Nambaryn Enkhbayar and remained in existence for a little over a decade.
The party received approval to use the Mongolian People's Party's old name by the Supreme Court of Mongolia in June 2011. Enkhbayar, a former Chairman of the original MPRP, a former Prime Minister of Mongolia and a former President of Mongolia, was the party's only chairman.
The MPRP merged with the Mongolian People's Party (MPP) in May 2021.
The party's stated mission was to:
The MPRP believed that with the implementation of these integrated policiesâÂÂaimed at creating human-centered social welfare, economic development and citizen-oriented governanceâÂÂMongolia and its people would achieve prosperity and progress.
The MPRP, along with the Democratic Party, advocated for restrictions on the number of years a foreign firm can operate in Mongolia, and called for new industrial mining projects to be fully Mongolian-controlled. Some observers labelled the party "populist" on account of this position. The MPRP campaigned on the platform of "resource nationalism" in the 2012 election.
The topic of changing the name, symbol, and ideology of the MPRP in post-communist Mongolia has been a subject of debate since the 1990s. During the 26th Party Congress of the MPRP in November 2010, it was ultimately decided that the party would revert back to its original name "Mongolian People's Party" and ideologically shift from democratic socialism to social democracy.
This decision was not popular among all factions within the MPRP and its 150,000 party members. Ultimately, it led to the party splitting into the MPP and MPRP, the latter led by former president, former prime minister and former MPRP chairman Nambaryn Enkhbayar. Enkhbayar's splinter party was officially permitted to use the name "Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party" by the Supreme Court of Mongolia on 24 June 2011.
In May 2012, the MPRP formed the Justice Coalition with the Mongolian National Democratic Party (MNDP), a splinter of the Democratic Party (DP) founded in 2005, to run for the upcoming 2012 elections. The coalition won 11 of the 76 seats in the State Great Khural and became a junior coalition partner with the governing DP. The coalition gradually broke up as MNDP and MPRP members of parliament crossed the floor to the DP and MPP. It was officially dissolved in accordance with the law in June 2016, with four remaining seats.
The MPRP ran independently in the 2016 parliamentary elections and won only a single seat in the State Great Khural.
In March 2020, the MPRP, the Civil WillâÂÂGreen Party, and the Mongolian Traditional United Party formed the Our Coalition to run for the 2020 parliamentary election. The coalition won a single seat in the State Great Khural, which belonged to the party's 2017 presidential nominee Sainkhuugiin Ganbaatar. He would join the Democratic Party in 2021, when the MPRP and the MPP decided to strategically unite for the upcoming 2021 presidential election.
On 29 April 2021, the year which commemorated the 100 Year Anniversary of the Mongolian People's Party, the MPRP and the Mongolian People's Party signed an agreement to merge the two parties. The MPRP was deregistered by the Supreme Court on 28 May 2021.