How Biju Janata Dal Lost The Plot

How Biju Janata Dal Lost the Plot… and Odisha!

Who could have thought in one’s widest imagination till the people of Odisha went to the polling booths in four phases to choose members of the Lok Sabha and state Assembly that Biju Janata Dal (BJD) would fare so miserably! Not only was the regional party, which unlike the Trinamool Congress in the neighbouring West Bengal never entertained national ambition, heading the local government for as many as 24 years without encountering any credible opposition from within and without the Assembly, but Naveen Patnaik who remained the chief minister all the while kept the government and the party tightly under his leash.

This became possible as there was not a single occasion that Patnaik could be accused of financial corruption or distribution of favours. An uncommon virtue among politicians in the Indian subcontinent.

That BJD would fare so poorly at the hustings to the extent of conceding of the 21 parliamentary seats 20 to BJP and one to Congress came as a highly pleasant surprise for the party that promotes Hindutva unabashedly. (This stands in sharp contrast to BJD winning all the Lok Sabha seats from the state in 2014 when most of the country was swept by Modi wave. The BJD tally was down to 12 in the 2019 elections. Besides other factors, BJD became a victim of anti-incumbency.)

As if drawing a blank in the Lok Sabha was not enough, BJD suffered the ignominy of handing over the reins of state administration to BJP, which won 78 of the 147 Assembly seats relegating BJD to 51 seats compared with 112 seats it held in the last house. Patnaik, who for very long enjoyed the affection and respect of the people of Odisha, himself fared badly in Assembly elections. Not sure about poll outcome, Patnaik this time contested from two constituencies – Hinjli and Kantabanji. Much to his and BJD’s distress he got defeated at Kantabanji by 16,334 votes and scraped through Hinjli with a margin of 4,636. The elections were a mea culpa for Patnaik whose successes and wide acceptability in earlier years in spite of his embarrassing difficulty to do business in local Odia language made him impervious to the ground falling out from underneath his feet.

Youngest of the three children of Biju and Gyan Patnaik, Odisha’s tallest political family, Naveen was born a year before Independence in Cuttack but was raised mostly outside the state. Naveen, an alumnus of Doon School and St. Stephen’s College, had Indian-American write Gita Mehta who passed away last year as his sibling. Now 77 and not in good health restricting his movement and interaction with people (all a major handicap for a politician), Patnaik, an accidental politician, was a sophisticate before he contested and comfortably won the Lok Sabha seat at Aska – his legendary father’s constituency – in 1997.

Patnaik thereby proved to be someone who had rubbed shoulders with people like Jacquelline Kennedy, Mick Jager and the Beatles and pursued interest in art and culture but then because of circumstances dived into politics. His inheriting “father’s responsibilities and not his privileges” and deciding to go through the rough trade of politics surprised his family members and countless admirers. Knowing him, they likely never thought Patnaik would rule Odisha for this length of time.

ALSO READ: Naveen Patnaik – The Accidental Chief Minister

His failing health apart, Patnaik became so very sure of popular support for him and the party that he founded in December 1997 after breaking away from Janata Dal and remains its president and sole arbiter that he did not realise the consequences of many of his decisions. The worst thing that could happen to a politician in a democracy is when he shuts himself from the people and thereby denies himself the benefit of first-hand feedback. Patnaik went a few steps further. Ministers were finding it increasingly difficult to meet their chief minister. They were given to understand that discussing state matters with V Karthikeyan Pandian, an IAS officer who quit the service to join BJD and confidante of Patnaik, was as good as confiding in chief minister.

Nobody will contest the fact that Pandian did an excellent job in all the postings, including private secretary to the chief minister that came his way. As Pandian resigned from the service in October 2023 to join the BJD, he was made chairman of Transformational Initiatives with cabinet minister rank. Bhubaneswar was then abuzz with speculation that non-Odia Pandian hailing from Tamil Nadu was chosen as the potential political successor to Patnaik and he was to become the principal strategist of BJD election campaign.

The proximity of a Tamilian bureaucrat – his IAS officer spouse Sujata is, however, an Odia – to Patnaik and his becoming arbiter of state affairs gave a handle to opposition leaders at the national level to mount their election campaign on the plank that BJD was out to destroy ‘Odia Ashmita’ (pride in English.) The bonhomie seen in parliament between the union government and BJD during 2019-24 didn’t stop Narendra Modi and Amit Shah from accusing Patnaik of handing over the reins to an outsider. Rahul Gandhi also joined the chorus.

In his defence Pandian said: “I am an Indian by birth and Odia by breath. The mother tongue of my children is Odia and Odisha is my karmabhoomi (the land where one works).” His loyalty to the state and its welfare is above reproach. But from Union education minister Dharmendra Pradhan to many BJD politicians, everyone thought Pandian stood accused of wielding extra-constitutional authority and spiriting away the powers of ministers, elected by the people.

Outstation reporters descending on Odisha for election coverage did mandatorily ask common citizens about what they feel about Patnaik delegating more and more authority to Pandian. Their answers can be summed up like this: “Naveen Babu is our revered Biju Patnaik’s son. There is no erosion in our affection for him. He not keeping well doesn’t mean that a Tamil will be his successor. This is not acceptable.” Calcutta has traditionally hosted a large Odia community and some expressed their anguish to this scribe over the ascendance of a ‘non-Odia’ in their state.” Unfortunately, so removed was Patnaik from what was happening on the ground that he failed to realise that the Pandian controversy was to become his Armageddon.

Besides the damage that Pandian factor did to ‘Odia Ashmita’ and in turn to BJD electoral prospects, Patnaik left BJD sympathisers confused by lending unconditional support to the Modi administration in parliament in passing the Citizenship Amendment Act, revocation of Article 370, Delhi-NCT Bill. In the election of the President, BJD voted for the NDA candidate Droupadi Murmu. Patnaik worked on the theme that he would never be part of Opposition attack of the union government as it would work in the interest of Odisha.

Mamata Banerjee and a few others made attempts to rope in Patnaik in the united opposition INDIA, but without any success. Patnaik holding olive branch to BJP throughout last Lok Sabha and also making attempts to have an electoral alliance with the ruling dispensation at the centre, which, however, fizzled out did not ensure that Modi-Shah would not go for his jugular during the election campaign. There is also no denying that BJP owes much to Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), which continues to expand its infrastructure in Odisha, through educational institutions notably, for its stunning electoral success. Now after the electoral drubbing, Patnaik has realised that as a regional party, the only way to revive its fortunes would be to play the role of a true opposition party in Rajya Sabha where BJD has nine members. Humouring Modi and Shah proved to be the undoing of BJD. Can much be salvaged now?

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Naveen Patnaik VK Pandian

Naveen Patnaik Inspired Me To Join Politics: VK Pandian

Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik’s close aide VK Pandian said that he was inspired by the Chief Minister to join politics.

“I decided because I was inspired by the Chief Minister, the way he was into public service. And it was not a grand plan or something for me to enter,” Pandian said in a free-wheeling conversation with ANI.

The former civil servant shared that his decision to join politics was completely unplanned and his batch-mates might have laughed when they found out that he had resigned from service and joined a political party.

“I would say that one year back if you had asked me, “Are you going to join politics?” I would have firmly said a ‘no’. My batch-mates will laugh if they know that I have resigned and I have joined a party because it was not in my plan at all,” Pandian said.

The ex-bureaucrat said that he noticed the love and affection of people while on a tour of the districts in Odisha, a year ago and that is when he thought he needs to go beyond the limits of “bureaucratic rules” while reaching out to the people.

“Eight, nine months back, I started touring the districts. And I saw the love and affection of people. It was very humbling. I thought that I should not be bound by bureaucratic rules in reaching out to the people. And that is the only reason why I resigned and joined, inspired by the Chief Minister. But I had no plans whatsoever to join politics. No plans,” Pandian said.

Sharing more about his career-altering tour, the former bureaucrat said that he travelled to all 30 districts of the State as part of reaching out to the people when the footfall at the chief minister’s grievance cell fell post-pandemic.

“I have always travelled with the Chief Minister. This time I travelled on my own to all 30 districts, 146-147 constituencies. We took this exercise because, after COVID, the footfall in the chief minister’s grievance cell had reduced. We had closed the Chief Minister’s grievance cell for two years because of Covid. After that it never picked up. People had stopped coming. There was very less footfall in the grievance cell. So the chief minister decided, why don’t we reach out? This is the first time in a state, in any state, the Chief Minister’s office went and did grievance in a decentralized manner, in constituencies, in blocks,” he shared.

Pandian said that on that tour he committed to people to solve their problems in a stipulated time and all the timelines were met “magically”.

“I committed to people that your problem, this problem will be solved in 10 days, this problem will be solved in 15 days, this problem will be solved in one month, the system rose to that occasion and with the Honourable Chief Minister’s guidance, whatever timelines we had set, it was all being met. It was completely magical. We had thousands of petitions, all transparent way, it has been disposed of,” the former civil servant said.

Pandian said his “inner call” to join politics came when he met those people that he realised the “strong connect” with them. He said he came to understand that he would not be able to reach out to them if he remains as continues to stay in the bureaucracy.

“So when I went to the people, when I met them, I realized that there is a strong connect with people. And I thought being a bureaucrat, I won’t be able to reach out to them. I have to get out of bureaucracy. It was an inner call,” he shared.

Speaking about being inspired by the Chief Minister he said that he has noticed the way Patnaik handles various situations and how he reacts to criticism throughout the decades which has moved him.

“I think one gets inspired being with him for more than a decade. You are working so closely with him. You get to see how he reacts to situations, how he reacts to criticism. So you get inspired by him. Perhaps something of him has rubbed in me. But you know he has a number of years of experience,” he said.

Pandian said that when he joined the bureaucracy, he was allotted Punjab cadre initially in the year 2000 but after the Super Cyclone he decided to go to Odisha instead because Naveen Patnaik had taken over as the Chief Minister.

“I got Punjab cadre initially in 2000. And in 1999, Super Cyclone had hit Odisha very badly. Odisha was in a very bad shape. So there was a dilemma of which cadre I should move. So I decided to go to Odisha because Mr Naveen Patnaik had taken over as Chief Minister of Odisha. And the director of our academy said that go to Odisha, you will get great chance to work. And there is an honest person who has become Chief Minister. So you will get great scope to work. So, that’s how I came to Odisha,” he said.

Speaking about his first impression of Naveen Patnaik, Pandian said that he did not fit the stereotype of a political person.

“Whatever stereotype one has about a political leader, he was completely unlike. Very warm, very down to earth, very humble and had an eye for good work. He had come and he immediately appreciated me for 2-3 things. Which I thought was very nice of him to tell to such a junior officer,” Pandian said. (ANI)

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