POLITICIAN

Annika Saarikko

1983 - Today

Photo of Annika Saarikko

Icon of person Annika Saarikko

Annika Virpi Irene Saarikko (born 10 November 1983) is a Finnish politician and minister who served as the Deputy Prime Minister of Finland from 2020 to 2023. She served as the leader of the Finnish Centre Party from 2020 to 2024. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Annika Saarikko is the 18,952nd most popular politician (down from 18,720th in 2019), the 591st most popular biography from Finland (down from 576th in 2019) and the 101st most popular Finnish Politician.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Annika Saarikko by language

Loading...

Among POLITICIANS

Among politicians, Annika Saarikko ranks 18,952 out of 19,576Before her are Tomáš Zdechovský, Xiong Ni, Blanche Lincoln, Sapar Isakov, Kevin Cramer, and Christian Schwarzer. After her are Joni Ernst, Vanessa Nakate, David Vitter, Mark Kirk, Lodewijk Asscher, and Bill Haslam.

Most Popular Politicians in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1983, Annika Saarikko ranks 703Before her are Aziz Ansari, Dele Aiyenugba, Marco Estrada, Vitaa, Aldo de Nigris, and Héctor Faubel. After her are Nasser Al-Shamrani, Heath Slater, Miho Fukumoto, Jan Schlaudraff, Leonardo Santiago, and Malik Fathi.

Others Born in 1983

Go to all Rankings

In Finland

Among people born in Finland, Annika Saarikko ranks 591 out of 751Before her are Marjut Rolig (1966), Chisu (1982), Niklas Hagman (1979), Maria Ohisalo (1985), Ville Nieminen (1977), and Harri Olli (1985). After her are Niklas Bäckström (1978), Esapekka Lappi (1991), Jyri Kjäll (1969), Antti Sumiala (1974), Jukka Raitala (1988), and Toni Kallio (1978).

Among POLITICIANS In Finland

Among politicians born in Finland, Annika Saarikko ranks 101Before her are Elina Valtonen (1981), Li Andersson (1987), Samppa Lajunen (1979), Jaana Pelkonen (1977), Ville Niinistö (1976), and Maria Ohisalo (1985). After her are Antti Aalto (1975), Krista Kiuru (1974), Marko Asell (1970), Toni Lydman (1977), Kai Mykkänen (1979), and Katri Kulmuni (1987).