2005 Mongolian presidential election
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2005 Mongolian presidential election
Summary
2005 Mongolian presidential election is a presidential election[1]. It draws 32 Wikipedia views per month (presidential_election category, ranking #99 of 417).[2]
Key Facts
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election is in the country of Mongolia[3].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's instance of is recorded as presidential election[4].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election followed 2001 Mongolian presidential election[5].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election was followed by 2009 Mongolian presidential election[6].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's office contested is recorded as President of Mongolia[7].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election took place on May 22, 2005[8].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's candidate is recorded as Nambaryn Enkhbayar[9].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's candidate is recorded as Mendsaikhany Enkhsaikhan[10].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's candidate is recorded as Bazarsad Jargalsaikhan[11].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's candidate is recorded as Badarchiin Erdenebat[12].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's successful candidate is recorded as Nambaryn Enkhbayar[13].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's applies to jurisdiction is recorded as Mongolia[14].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's total valid votes is recorded as {'amount': '+918418'}[15].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's eligible voters is recorded as {'amount': '+1241691'}[16].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's ballots cast is recorded as {'amount': '+930976'}[17].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's number of spoilt votes is recorded as {'amount': '+12092'}[18].
- 2005 Mongolian presidential election's number of blank votes is recorded as {'amount': '+466'}[19].
Body
When and Where
2005 Mongolian presidential election took place on May 22, 2005[8]. It is in the country of Mongolia[3].
Context
2005 Mongolian presidential election's instance of is recorded as presidential election[4]. It followed 2001 Mongolian presidential election[5]. It was followed by 2009 Mongolian presidential election[6].
Why It Matters
2005 Mongolian presidential election draws 32 Wikipedia views per month (presidential_election category, ranking #99 of 417).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20]