List of current longest ruling non-royal national leaders
This list of current longest ruling non-royal national leaders is a list of the current longest ruling heads of nation-states or national governments, who are not royalty, and have served ten years or longer, sorted by length of tenure.
The individuals on the list are not always the most powerful figure in their country's national government. Some are or have been at one time but not necessarily continuously throughout the listed timespan. Some of them have held more than one national leadership level office: presidency, prime minister-ship, or some other title implying or widely believed to confer national leadership. When more than one such office exists in a country, there may be uncertainty as to which member of the national government actually has the ultimate power. Therefore, this list combines all national level offices held concurrently or consecutively by each individual leader.
Rank | Name | Country | Office | Tenure Began | Length of Tenure |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Paul Biya | Cameroon | Prime Minister, then President[1] | 30 June 1975 | 41 years, 157 days |
2. | Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo | Equatorial Guinea | President[2] | 3 August 1979 | 37 years, 123 days |
3. | José Eduardo dos Santos | Angola | President | 10 September 1979 | 37 years, 85 days |
4. | Robert Mugabe | Zimbabwe | Prime Minister, then President[3] | 18 April 1980 | 36 years, 230 days |
5. | Ali Khamenei | Iran | President, then Supreme Leader[4] | 13 October 1981 | 35 years, 52 days |
6. | Nursultan Nazarbayev | Kazakhstan | Prime Minister, then First Secretary, then President[5] |
22 March 1984 | 32 years, 257 days |
7. | Hun Sen | Cambodia | Prime Minister[6] | 14 January 1985 | 31 years, 325 days |
8. | Yoweri Museveni | Uganda | President | 26 January 1986 | 30 years, 313 days |
9. | Omar al-Bashir | Sudan | President[7] | 30 June 1989 | 27 years, 157 days |
10. | Idriss Déby | Chad | President[8] | 2 December 1990 | 26 years, 2 days |
11. | Isaias Afwerki | Eritrea | President[9] | 27 April 1991 | 25 years, 221 days |
12. | Emomali Rahmon | Tajikistan | President[10] | 19 November 1992 | 24 years, 15 days |
13. | Paul Kagame | Rwanda | Vice-President, then President[11] | 19 July 1994 | 22 years, 138 days |
14. | Alexander Lukashenko | Belarus | President | 20 July 1994 | 22 years, 137 days |
15. | Yahya Jammeh | The Gambia | President[12] | 22 July 1994 | 22 years, 135 days |
16. | Denis Sassou Nguesso | Republic of the Congo | President[13] | 25 October 1997 | 19 years, 40 days |
17. | Kim Yong-nam | North Korea | President of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly[14] |
5 September 1998 | 18 years, 90 days |
18. | Tuilaepa Aiono Sailele Malielegaoi | Samoa | Prime Minister | 23 November 1998 | 18 years, 11 days |
19. | Abdelaziz Bouteflika | Algeria | President | 27 April 1999 | 17 years, 221 days |
20. | Ismaïl Omar Guelleh | Djibouti | President | 8 May 1999 | 17 years, 210 days |
21. | Vladimir Putin | Russia | Prime Minister, then President[15] | 9 August 1999 | 17 years, 117 days |
22. | Bashar al-Assad | Syria | President | 17 July 2000 | 16 years, 140 days |
23. | Joseph Kabila | Democratic Republic of the Congo | President | 17 January 2001 | 15 years, 322 days |
24. | Ralph Gonsalves | Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | Prime Minister | 29 March 2001 | 15 years, 250 days |
25. | Recep Tayyip Erdoğan | Turkey | Prime Minister, then President[16] | 14 March 2003 | 13 years, 265 days |
26. | Filip Vujanović | Montenegro | President[17] | 22 May 2003 | 13 years, 196 days |
27. | Ilham Aliyev | Azerbaijan | Prime Minister, then President[18] | 4 August 2003 | 13 years, 122 days |
28. | Artur Rasizade | Azerbaijan | Prime Minister[19] | 6 August 2003 | 13 years, 120 days |
29. | Abdelkader Taleb Omar | Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic | Prime Minister | 29 October 2003 | 13 years, 36 days |
30. | Shavkat Mirziyoyev | Uzbekistan | Prime Minister, then Acting President[20] |
11 December 2003 | 12 years, 359 days |
31. | Roosevelt Skerrit | Dominica | Prime Minister | 8 January 2004 | 12 years, 331 days |
32. | Lee Hsien Loong | Singapore | Prime Minister | 12 August 2004 | 12 years, 114 days |
33. | Mahmoud Abbas | Palestine | President[21] | 15 January 2005 | 11 years, 324 days |
34. | Faure Gnassingbé | Togo | President[22] | 4 May 2005 | 11 years, 214 days |
35. | Salva Kiir Mayardit | South Sudan | President[23] | 30 July 2005 | 11 years, 127 days |
36. | Pierre Nkurunziza | Burundi | President | 26 August 2005 | 11 years, 100 days |
37. | Angela Merkel | Germany | Federal Chancellor | 22 November 2005 | 11 years, 12 days |
38. | Ellen Johnson Sirleaf | Liberia | President | 16 January 2006 | 10 years, 323 days |
39. | Evo Morales | Bolivia | President | 22 January 2006 | 10 years, 317 days |
40. | Raúl Castro | Cuba | First Secretary, President and Prime Minister[24] |
31 July 2006 | 10 years, 126 days |
41. | Doris Leuthard | Switzerland | Federal Council Member[25] | 1 August 2006 | 10 years, 125 days |
42. | Frank Bainimarama | Fiji | Acting Head of State, then Prime Minister[26] |
5 December 2006 | 9 years, 365 days |
Footnotes
- ↑ was Prime Minister of Cameroon from 30 June 1975 to 6 November 1982
- ↑ was Chairman of the Revolutionary Military Council / Supreme Military Council of Equatorial Guinea from 3 August 1979 to 12 October 1982
- ↑ was Prime Minister of Zimbabwe from 18 April 1980 to 31 December 1987
- ↑ Was President of Iran from 13 October 1981 to 2 August 1989, leaving the presidency close to two months after becoming Supreme Leader. Was approved as Supreme Leader of Iran by the Assembly of Experts and sworn in on 4 June 1989, shortly after the death of the founder of this Shia Islamic Republic, Ruhollah Khomeini.
- ↑ Was Prime Minister of the Kazakh SSR from 22 March 1984 to 27 July 1989, First Secretary of the Communist Party of the Kazakh SSR from 22 June 1989 to 14 December 1991, Chairman of the Supreme Soviet (head of State) of the Kazakh SSR from 22 February 1990 to 24 April 1990, and President of the Kazakh SSR from 24 April 1990 to 16 December 1991.
- ↑ Was Prime Minister of the Vietnam-occupation one-Party state called the People's Republic of Kampuchea from 14 January 1985 to 1 May 1989. Was also Prime Minister during the entire existence of the State of Cambodia from 1 May 1989 to 24 September 1993.
- ↑ was Chairman of the Sudanese Revolutionary Command Council for National Salvation from 30 June 1989 to 16 October 1993
- ↑ was President of the Council of State of Chad from 2 December 1990 to 4 March 1991
- ↑ Was Secretary-General of the Provisional Government of Eritrea from 27 April 1991 to 24 May 1993, when Eritrea declared independence from Ethiopia.
- ↑ was Chairman of the Supreme Assembly (Speaker of Parliament) of Tajikistan – de facto head of state – from 19 November 1992 to 16 November 1994
- ↑ Was Vice-President from 19 July 1994 to 22 April 2000 and Acting President from 24 March 2000 to 22 April 2000.
- ↑ was Chairman of the Armed Forces Provisional Ruling Council of the Gambia from 22 July 1994 to 28 September 1996
- ↑ was previously President of the Central Committee of the Congolese Party of Labour from 8 February 1979 to 31 August 1992, when the country was a one-Party state known as the People's Republic of the Congo
- ↑ The "President of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly" performs some of the duties of a head of state. The position of President (formerly the head of state) was written out of the constitution in 1998. State founder Kim Il-sung, who died in 1994, was given the appellation "Eternal President".
- ↑ Was Prime Minister of Russia from 9 August 1999 to 7 May 2000 and Acting President from 31 December 1999 to 7 May 2000; then President of Russia from 7 May 2000 to 7 May 2008; then Prime Minister again from 8 May 2008 to 7 May 2012.
- ↑ was Prime Minister of Turkey from 14 March 2003 to 28 August 2014
- ↑ Montenegro did not gain independence until 3 June 2006, being part of Serbia and Montenegro. Vujanović was previously Acting President from 25 November 2002 to 19 May 2003.
- ↑ was Acting President of Azerbaijan from 6 August 2003 to 31 October 2003
- ↑ Was previously Prime Minister of Azerbaijan from 20 July 1996 to 4 August 2003; and Interim Prime Minister from 6 August 2003 to 4 November 2003.
- ↑ became Acting President of Uzbekistan on 8 September 2016
- ↑ was previously Prime Minister of the Palestinian National Authority from 19 March 2003 to 6 September 2003
- ↑ Was previously President of Togo from 5 February 2005 to 25 February 2005, when it was disputed whether he had inherited the presidency from his deceased father, Gnassingbé Eyadéma.
- ↑ South Sudan did not gain independence until 9 July 2011, being part of Sudan. Kiir was Acting President of the Southern Sudan Autonomous Region from 30 July 2005 to 11 August 2005.
- ↑ Was Acting President and Acting Prime Minister of Cuba from 31 July 2006 to 24 February 2008; and Acting First Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba from 31 July 2006 to 19 April 2011. Under the one-Party system, the position of First Secretary is a more important and powerful position than the Presidency of Cuba.
- ↑ The Swiss Federal Council is a collective seven-member Head of State. Leuthard served as chairperson of the Federal Council, i.e. as the President of the Swiss Confederation, in the constitutional customary one-year period from 1 January to 31 December 2010. From 1 January 2016 to present, she is the deputy chairperson of the Federal Council, or Vice President, of Switzerland.
- ↑ Was previously President of the Interim Military Government of Fiji from 29 May 2000 to 13 July 2000; then again President of the Interim Military Government of Fiji from 5 December 2006 to 4 January 2007. Was Acting Prime Minister from 5 January 2007 to 22 September 2014.
See also
- Current reigning monarchs by length of reign
- List of current state leaders by date of assumption of office
- List of longest-ruling non-royal national leaders since 1900
- List of the oldest living state leaders
External links
- Rulers.org List of rulers throughout time and places