POLITICIAN

Dmytro Razumkov

1983 - Today

Photo of Dmytro Razumkov

Icon of person Dmytro Razumkov

Dmytro Oleksandrovych Razumkov (Ukrainian: Дмитро Олександрович Разумков; born 8 October 1983) is a Ukrainian politician and former chairman of the Verkhovna Rada (from August 2019 to 7 October 2021). Previously he was leader of the Servant of the People party. In the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election he led the party to a win of 124 seats on the nationwide party list and 130 constituency seats. Razumkov was a member of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine from 6 September 2019 to 15 October 2021. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 22 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 19 in 2024). Dmytro Razumkov is the 18,116th most popular politician (down from 17,896th in 2024), the 1,070th most popular biography from Ukraine (down from 1,066th in 2019) and the 226th most popular Ukrainian Politician.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Dmytro Razumkov by language

Loading...

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1983, Dmytro Razumkov ranks 326Before him are Chris Rankin, Marcelo Huertas, Kimberly Kane, Ethan Carter III, Jean-Noël Barrot, and Ameera al-Taweel. After him are Alexander Wang, Florian Mayer, Jessy Matador, Jesse Moss, Igor Andreev, and Lima.

Others Born in 1983

Go to all Rankings

In Ukraine

Among people born in Ukraine, Dmytro Razumkov ranks 1,070 out of 1,365Before him are Zhanna Pintusevich-Block (1972), Serhiy Arbuzov (1976), Anna Bessonova (1984), Halyna Hutchins (1979), Taras Stepanenko (1989), and Alona Bondarenko (1984). After him are Roman Neustädter (1988), Ihor Pavlyuk (1967), Vasyl Arkhypenko (1957), Alexander Chernin (1960), Edvin Marton (1974), and Mykola Oleshchuk (1972).

Among POLITICIANS In Ukraine

Among politicians born in Ukraine, Dmytro Razumkov ranks 226Before him are Valentyn Nalyvaichenko (1966), Valeriy Heletey (1967), Iryna Vereshchuk (1979), Ihor Klymenko (1972), Volodymyr Struk (1964), and Serhiy Arbuzov (1976). After him are Illia Kyva (1977), Pavel Gubarev (1983), Oleg Tsaryov (1970), Ze'ev Elkin (1971), Alexander Novak (1971), and Andriy Melnyk (1975).