POLITICIAN

Emil Dimitriev

1979 - Today

Photo of Emil Dimitriev

Icon of person Emil Dimitriev

Emil Dimitriev (Macedonian: Емил Димитриев, pronounced ['emil dimit'riɛf]; born 19 March 1979) is a Macedonian conservative politician, sociologist, and general secretary of the VMRO-DPMNE. He served as Prime Minister of Macedonia, following the resignation of Nikola Gruevski, from January 2016 to May 2017. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Emil Dimitriev is the 18,497th most popular politician (up from 18,785th in 2019), the 96th most popular biography from North Macedonia (up from 104th in 2019) and the 33rd most popular Macedonian Politician.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Emil Dimitriev by language

Loading...

Among POLITICIANS

Among politicians, Emil Dimitriev ranks 18,497 out of 19,576Before him are Russ Feingold, Paul Laxalt, Don McKinnon, Valeriu Streleț, Firmin Ngrébada, and José Manuel Soria. After him are Manik Sarkar, Lorenzo Fontana, Bill Rowling, Harri Stojka, Katherine Tai, and Enex Jean-Charles.

Most Popular Politicians in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1979, Emil Dimitriev ranks 555Before him are Pablo Orbaiz, Julien Ingrassia, Brett Emerton, Maksym Kalynychenko, Pierre Bouvier, and Aldo Duscher. After him are Frank Mir, Deivid, Ken Duken, Gréta Arn, Carmelita Jeter, and Walter Davis.

Others Born in 1979

Go to all Rankings

In North Macedonia

Among people born in North Macedonia, Emil Dimitriev ranks 96 out of 156Before him are Gjorgji Hristov (1976), Krste Velkoski (1988), Oliver Spasovski (1976), Tamara Todevska (1985), Stojna Vangelovska (1964), and Pero Antić (1982). After him are Ezgjan Alioski (1992), Stefan Ristovski (1992), Aleksandar Trajkovski (1992), Stole Dimitrievski (1993), Trajko Veljanovski (1962), and Elif Elmas (1999).

Among POLITICIANS In North Macedonia

Among politicians born in North Macedonia, Emil Dimitriev ranks 33Before him are Ljubčo Georgievski (1966), Hari Kostov (1959), Dimitar Kovačevski (1974), Radmila Šekerinska (1972), Oliver Spasovski (1976), and Stojna Vangelovska (1964). After him are Trajko Veljanovski (1962), Bujar Osmani (1979), Nikola Dimitrov (1972), and Ana Colovic Lesoska (1980).