Tsolmon Erdéne

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Tsolmon Erdéne
Lee Hsien Loong - 20101112.jpg
Tsolmon in 2010
6th Prime Minister of Catam Pon
(Appellation)
In office
8 May 1994 – 15 May 2018
Preceded bySarnaj Tsetseg
Succeeded byNaryn Bák
MP for Tanjonq Pégar
In office
4 May 2012 – present
Preceded byTzorigtoj Áv
Personal details
Born10 February 1952
Tanjonq Pégar, Cixato Province, Catam Pon
NationalityCatamese
Political partyPeople’s Party
SpouseXo Cinq-Erdéne
Children4
Alma materCixato University
ProfessionPublic Administration
Military General

Tsolmon Erdéne (ipa: t͡sʰoɮmoɴ eʀdəne; Catamese: 𐐞𐐫𐑊𐑋𐐫𐑍 𐐇𐑉𐐼𐐳𐑍𐐯) was the 6th Prime Minister of Catam Pon, and was a well-known reformer who helped to push the country through the final post-economic collapse stagnation in the early- to late-2000s. He is the son of the 4th Prime Minister, Tzorigtoj Áv, who died during in 2012, over halfway through his son's reign.

He served in the Armed Forces of Catam Pon (CAF) between 1971 and 1984 and attained the rank Brigadier-General. He resigned from the CAF in 1984 to enter politics.

Political Views==

National Democracy and democratization

Much like the rest of the PP, Tsolmon has long been an advocate of Patolian-style National Democracy, though he acknowledged a certain "necessary pragmatism" in regard to the democratization of Catam Pon. He believed the government has a "strong role" in forming and shaping an ideal society, something that often transferred over into his rather conservative social views.

Militarization

As a previous brigadier-general in the CAF, Tsolmon was a proponent of re-militarization, which had been halted with the collapse of the Varangian communist party and the Catamese economic collapse.

Reform

Tsolmon's economic reform is credited with fundamentally changing and modernizing Catam Pon's economy, where he temporarily stopped unconditional stagnation-era subsidization, which forced many companies to comply with government policy, moving away from the previous completely laissez faire economy to a heavier handed, but temporary, interventionist economy.

Legacy