Naresh Iyer @ITPB Carnival 2018

DR.NARA CHANDRABABU NAIDU

N Chandrababu Naidu to take oath today
TDP president N Chandrababu Naidu will be sworn in as the first chief minister of residuary Andhra Pradesh at the ‘auspicious’ moment of 7.27pm on Sunday.

Nara Chandrababu Naidu
N. Chandrababu Naidu.jpg
N. Chandrababu Naidu in 2007
13th Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh
In office
8 June 2014 – present
Preceded byN. Kiran Kumar Reddy
In office
1 September 1995 – 13 May 2004
Preceded byNandamuri Taraka Rama Rao
Succeeded byYS Rajasekhara Reddy
ConstituencyKuppamChittoor district, Andhra Pradesh



TDP president N Chandrababu Naidu will be sworn in as the first chief minister of residuary Andhra Pradesh at the 'auspicious' moment of 7.27pm on Sunday. The swearing-in ceremony will be held at the sprawling 70-acre ground outside Acharya Nagarjuna University at Nambur village between Vijayawada and Guntur cities. This is the first time that a chief minister will be taking oath of office at a place away from the state capital. Though Andhra Pradesh has been divided into Telangana and residuary AP, Hyderabad will be the common capital for both states for 10 years.

The TDP, which is returning to power after a gap of 10 years, is pulling out all stops to make the event 'memorable', unmindful of the criticism by the main opposition YSRCP which alleged that Rs 30 crore was spent for the programme. Naidu's son Nara Lokesh said the event has been planned big only "to attract overseas attention".

READ ALSO: No Reddy mantri for Chandrababu Naidu?
Chandrababu Naidu to waive off farm loans totalling Rs 54,000 crore


The party is mobilizing about five lakh people. Special flights, trains and buses have been arranged to transport people to the oath-taking venue.



BJP top leaders LK Advani and Murali Manohar Joshi, Union ministers Rajnath Singh, M Venkaiah Naidu, Arun Jaitley, Prakash Javadekar, Nirmala Seetharaman, Sadananda Gowda, and Piyush Goyal, chief ministers Navin Patnaik (Odisha), Prakash Singh Badal (Punjab), Manohar Parrikar (Goa), Shivaraj Singh Chauhan (MP), Raman Singh (Chhattisgarh), Vasundhara Raje (Rajasthan) and Anandi Ben Patel (Gujarat) have already confirmed their participation.

Meanwhile, police battalions took over the control of the venue. AP DGP JV Ramudu visited the site and reviewed the security arrangements. All goods and passenger vehicles passing through the national highway between Guntur and Vijayawada will be diverted through alternative routes. No vehicle except those coming for the swearing-in programme will be allowed to enter into Guntur district on Sunday.

READ ALSO: A grand swearing in awaits Chandrababu Naidu

Most of the VVIPs arrived by special charted flights to Gannavaram on Saturday night. About 200 rooms in star hotels in Vijayawada have been reserved for the stay of VVIPs, including the chief ministers.

Two helicopters are kept ready at Gannavaram to take VVIPs arriving on Sunday afternoon straight to the guest house near the venue.



NaraChandrababu Naidu (born 20 April 1950) is an Indian politician and the President of Telugu Desam Party in Andhra Pradesh. He is the current Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh. He took oath of office on the outskirts of Guntur, near the Acharya Nagarjuna University campus at 7.27 PM on 8 June 2014.[1][2][3][4]
He was the state's youngest assembly member and youngest minister at 28 and served as the longest chief minister of the state from 1995 to 2004. He unleashed a series of reforms after taking over the reins of state. With a firm conviction, Naidu laid emphasis on the use of modern information technology. Thus, he was instrumental in making Hyderabad one of the IT hubs in India and earned praise from global leaders and media for his public policies and approach to governance.[5][6]
The 2004 election defeat for Naidu was primarily attributed to the Farmer not factored high into the scheme of things. An anti-incumbency factor, the severe drought and increasing debt have driven hundreds of farmers in the state to commit suicide. Naidu ignored the large rural population with his policies, created a negative image for him.[7] He subsequently lost 2009 Assembly elections and became the longest serving Leader of opposition since 2004. He was also criticized for his frequent change of mind regarding support to Andhra Pradesh Bifurcation.[8] He stormed back into power in the general elections held in 2014.
Many call him India's only politician with a 21st century vision and perhaps the only chief minister in independent India whose objectives and achievements are difficult to describe without using terms out of classic management texts.[9]British Prime Minister Tony Blair and U.S. President Bill Clinton visitedHyderabad during Naidu's tenure as chief minister, and the Governor of Illinoisproclaimed a Naidu Day in his honor. He has won a number of awards, including IT Indian of the Millennium from India Today, Business Person of the Year by The Economic Times, South Asian of the Year from Time Asia and membership in the World Economic Forum's Dream Cabinet.[10][11][12][13]Naidu chaired the National IT Panel under the NDA government and was described as one of the "hidden seven", working wonders around the world, byProfit (Oracle Corporation's monthly magazine).

Early life and education[edit]

Naidu was born on 20 April 1950 at Naravari PalleChittoor districtAndhra Pradesh in a Kamma family.[16][17] His father, N. Kharjura Naidu, worked in agriculture and his mother Amanamma was a housewife.[18] Since his village had no school, Naidu attended primary school in Seshapuram until class five and the Chandragiri Government High School until class nine.[19] He went to Tirupati for his higher education, studying there from class 10 until he received his master's degree. Naidu completed his BA degree in 1972 before enrolling in an MA program in economics. In 1974, he began work towards a PhD under D. L. Narayana (Andhra Pradesh Finance Commission chairman), researching the economic ideas of N. G. Ranga. Naidu did not complete his PhD, instead becoming involved in politics.[19][20][21]

Early political career[edit]

Naidu was attracted towards politics at an early age, and joined Youth Congress as a student leader in Chandragiri, nearTirupati. After emergency was clamped on the country in 1975, he came close to Sanjay Gandhi.[19]

Legislative career, 1978–1983[edit]

Naidu received a Congress ticket in 1978 under the 20-percent quota for youth from the Chandragiri constituency. He won, and was appointed as technical education and cinematography minister in T Anjaiah's government at the age of 28.[22] He was the youngest minister in the Congress cabinet.[23]
As the cinematography minister, Mr Naidu came in contact with NT Rama Rao, popularly known as NTR, the reigning superstar of Telugu cinema. In 1980, he married Bhuvaneswari, NTR's second daughter.[24]

Telugu Desam Party[edit]

See also: Telugu Desam Party
In 1982, NTR formed the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) and swept the assembly polls held in 1983. Mr Naidu, who was then still in the Congress, was defeated by a TDP candidate in Chandragiri. He joined the TDP soon after.[24]

Rise in the party[edit]

Mr Naidu got the chance to show his political skills in August 1984, when Nadendla Bhaskara Rao staged a coup against NTR. He rallied the TDP MLAs together, and paraded them before the President of IndiaNTR was reinstated as the chief minister of Andhra Pradesh 31 days later. Impressed with his son-in-law's manoeuvres, NTR appointed Naidu general secretary of the party and he began playing an important role in the TDP after Rao's coup attempt.[24]

Legislative career, 1989–1994[edit]

In the 1989 assembly election, Chandrababu Naidu contested from Kuppam and won with a slender majority of 5,000-odd votes.[25] But, as the Congress had regained power in the election, Naidu had to sit in the Opposition.[26] He served as Coordinator of the Telugu Desam Party, in which capacity he effectively handled the party's role of main opposition in the assembly which won him wide appreciation from both the party and the public. His role during this phase both inside the Legislative Assembly and outside was a critical factor for the subsequent success of the party at the hustings.[25]

Palace coup[edit]

In 1994 the TDP regained power following an anti-Congress wave triggered by anti-liquor, anti-incumbency factions, and he was reelected to the Assembly from Kuppam Assembly constituency with a large majority of 57,000 votes and held the important portfolios of Revenue and Finance. During this tenure Mr. Naidu systematically introduced transparency in Government, thus breaking the tradition of inordinate secrecy in the Finance department.[25] However, in August 1995, Naidu staged a coup against NTR, in an apparent attempt to pre-empt his second wife, Lakshmi Parvathi from wresting control of the party. The whole Nandamuri family supported him in this regard. But NTR was a dejected man, and he died soon after.[25]

As Chief Minister (1995–2004)[edit]

Dark-haired man giving gifts to grey-haired man
Naidu greets Bill Clinton in 2000
As chief minister, Naidu advocated short-term sacrifice to turn Andhra Pradesh into an Asian tiger over the next 20 years.[27] He slashed food subsidies (among other things), and raised power tariffs.[28]
CNN and Time gave Naidu widespread coverage; CNN said "In just five years, he has turned an impoverished, rural backwater place into India's new information-technology hub",[10] and Time magazine named him South Asian of the Year.[29]Naidu was the West's favourite Indian; Tony Blair and Bill Clinton visited him in Hyderabad, the state capital, and the Governor of Illinois proclaimed Naidu Day in his honour.[30]

Vision 2020[edit]

Naidu produced a vision statement, "Vision 2020", with US consultants McKinsey & Company[30] which proposed:
  • Universal, low-cost education and healthcare
  • Rural employment
  • Replacement of small investors with large corporations
Middle-aged man listening to two younger men
Naidu in discussion with students as chief minister of Andhra Pradesh

1999 election victory[edit]

The Telugu Desam Party, led by Naidu, won a majority in the state legislature: 185 of 294 seats in the Assembly and 29 of 42 in the 1999 general election, making it the second-largest party in the BJP-led NDA coalition government.[citation needed]

Hyderabad development[edit]

Naidu said, "If you want to develop a state, you have to make its main cities a showpiece. Hyderabad is the capital of Andhra Pradesh. Naturally, when a foreign investor is coming, if I ask them to go to WarangalTirupati or Vijayawada they may not go. So for the key sectors like information technology, biotechnology, healthcare and various outsourcing services",[31] coining the slogan "Bye-byeBangalore, hello Hyderabad".[10] Microsoft Corporation has established a software-development centre in Hyderabad, the second such centre outside Seattle. Naidu encouraged other global IT companies (IBM, Dell, Deloitte, Computer Associates and Oracle) to move to Hyderabad, making presentations to global CEOs convincing them to invest in his state.[12][32]
Large round building, with cross-hatched superstructure
Hi-Tech City, the crown jewel of Naidu, in Hyderabad

2003 assassination attempt[edit]

On 1 October 2003 Naidu survived a land-mine blast, escaping with a fractured leftcollarbone and hairline fractures of two right ribs. The blast occurred about 16:00 IST when Naidu was travelling in a convoy to the Lord Venkateswara temple in the Tirumala hills for the annual Brahmotsavam festival.[33] State Information Technology Minister B. Gopalakrishna Reddy, Telugu Desam legislators R. Rajasekhar Reddy and Ch. Krishnamurthy and driver Srinivasa Raju were also injured.

2004 election defeat[edit]

The Telugu Desam Party (led by Naidu) failed to retain power after two successive wins, winning 47 of 294 seats in the state assembly and five of 42 in the Lok Sabha. While many of his ministers lost, Naidu won decisively in Kuppam.[34]

Reasons[edit]

According to Naidu, the 2004 election loss was primarily due to a severe drought and anti-incumbency sentiment. However, he was seen to have ignored the large rural population with his policies, failing to reach poorer voters. Years of drought and increasing debt have increased the suicide rate.[35][36]

2014 Elections Victory[edit]

The Telugu Desam Party (led by Naidu) returned to power, in the state of Residual Andhra Pradesh (Seemandhra) winning 102 seats out of 175 seats.[37] Chandrababu Naidu allied with BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi and the leader of Jana sena party Pawan Kalyan during these elections. Naidu led TDP to a land slide victory in the state of Seemandhra, but lost to TRS in the region of Telangana which will become the newest state of India on 1 June.[38]Chandrababu Naidu will take oath as the first Chief Minister of the residuary state of Andhra Pradesh at 7:27 pm on 8 June at mangalgiri in the grounds of acharya nagarjuna university near Guntur.[39]

Personal life[edit]

Naidu is married to N.T. Rama Rao's second daughter, Bhuvaneswari.[citation needed] The couple have a son, Lokesh, who is married to Brahmani (Eldest daughter of Nandamuri Balakrishna, Rao's son).[citation needed]

Achievements[edit]

  • Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh for eight years, eight months and 13 days (1995–2004)
  • At 28, the state's youngest assembly member and minister[22]
  • Voted IT Indian of the Millennium in a poll by India Today and 20:20 Media[40]
  • Longest-serving opposition leader of opposition in the Andhra Pradesh assembly[41]

Controversy[edit]

Assets case[edit]

In November 2011 the Andhra Pradesh High Court ordered an investigation of Naidu, petitioned by Y. S. Vijayamma (MLA and wife of Late Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy, who sought an inquiry into Naidu's alleged disproportionate assets). The petition accused Naidu of doling out favours to corporations and amassing undue wealth.[42][43][44]
Naidu fought to halt the investigation, challenging the high-court order before the Supreme Court; the latter refused to intervene, asking the petitioners to approach the high court for an interim order. Naidu, Ramoji Rao and others filed a vacation petition in the high court against the Central Bank of India probe. Reliance Industries impleaded in the case, and Chief Justice Madan Lokur recused himself because he owned Reliance stock. Counsel for Reliance expressed concern that the case might damage the company and its investors; allegations levelled by the petitioner against Naidu pertained to decisions about Reliance investment in the Krishna Godavari Basin and alleged kickbacks received by Naidu received through Reliance investment in Ushodaya Enterprises. On 13 December 2011 the Andhra Pradesh high court, in an interim order, stayed the investigation;[45] on 16 February 2012 the court dismissed the petition, ruling that it did not meet the parameters of public-interest litigation

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