Though his ties to Putin’s daughter, as well as Kremlin éminence grise Sergey Kiriyenko, inevitably aided his rapid rise through Russia’s political system, Filimonov’s often bewildering actions in office, which have been further amplified by his savvy use of social media, have very quickly made him notorious far beyond his northern fief.
Arguably, the single important fact in Georgy Filimonov’s early biography is that his father Yury once trained at a martial arts centre in the Vologda region’s biggest city Cherepovets with one Sergey Kiriyenko, who, despite briefly being Russia’s prime minister, is best known today for being the Kremlin’s deputy chief of staff, a role that has grown to be extremely powerful during his tenure.
Filimonov’s career success is tightly bound up with the name Kiriyenko, and it was through his patron that he got a job in the Presidential Administration in 2005, aged just 25. Beginning as a consultant, he rose to become an adviser in the foreign policy department where he compiled analytical reports and assisted with preparations for Putin’s trips abroad.