P. Chidambaram | |
Office1: | Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha |
Constituency1: | Tamil Nadu |
Term Start1: | 10 June 2022 |
Predecessor1: | A. Navaneethakrishnan |
Term Start2: | 5 July 2016 |
Term End2: | 16 June 2022 |
Constituency2: | Maharashtra |
Predecessor2: | Vijay J. Darda |
Successor2: | Imran Pratapgarhi |
Office3: | Union Minister of Home Affairs |
Primeminister3: | Manmohan Singh |
Term Start3: | 29 November 2008 |
Term End3: | 31 July 2012 |
Predecessor3: | Shivraj Patil |
Successor3: | Sushilkumar Shinde |
Office4: | Union Minister of Finance |
Term Start4: | 31 July 2012 |
Term End4: | 26 May 2014 |
Primeminister4: | Manmohan Singh |
Predecessor4: | Pranab Mukherjee |
Successor4: | Arun Jaitley |
Term Start5: | 22 May 2004 |
Term End5: | 30 November 2008 |
Primeminister5: | Manmohan Singh |
Predecessor5: | Jaswant Singh |
Successor5: | Pranab Mukherjee |
Primeminister6: | I. K. Gujral |
Term Start6: | 1 May 1997 |
Term End6: | 19 March 1998 |
Predecessor6: | I. K. Gujral |
Successor6: | Yashwant Sinha |
Primeminister7: | H. D. Deve Gowda |
Term Start7: | 1 June 1996 |
Term End7: | 21 April 1997 |
Predecessor7: | Jaswant Singh |
Successor7: | I. K. Gujral |
Office8: | Union Minister of Corporate Affairs |
Primeminister8: | H. D. Deve Gowda |
Term Start8: | 1 June 1996 |
Term End8: | 21 April 1997 |
Predecessor8: | Jaswant Singh |
Successor8: | Inder Kumar Gujral |
Office9: | Union Minister of Law and Justice |
Primeminister9: | H. D. Deve Gowda |
Term Start9: | 1 June 1996 |
Term End9: | 29 June 1996 |
Predecessor9: | Ram Jethmalani |
Successor9: | Ramakant Khalap |
Office10: | Union Minister of Commerce & Industry |
Primeminister10: | P. V. Narasimha Rao |
Term Start10: | 10 February 1995 |
Term End10: | 3 April 1996 |
Predecessor10: | Pranab Mukherjee |
Successor10: | P. V. Narasimha Rao |
Office11: | Union Minister of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions |
Primeminister11: | Rajiv Gandhi |
Term Start11: | 26 December 1985 |
Term End11: | 2 December 1989 |
Predecessor11: | Kamakhya Prasad Singh Deo |
Successor11: | Margaret Alva |
Office12: | Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha |
Term Start12: | 17 May 2004 |
Term End12: | 18 May 2014 |
Predecessor12: | E. M. Sudarsana Natchiappan |
Successor12: | P. R. Senthilnathan |
Constituency12: | Sivaganga |
Term Start13: | 31 December 1984 |
Term End13: | 26 April 1999 |
Predecessor13: | R. Swaminathan |
Successor13: | E. M. Sudarsana Natchiappan |
Constituency13: | Sivaganga |
Birth Date: | 16 September 1945 |
Birth Place: | Kandanur, Madras Presidency, British India (now in Tamil Nadu, India) |
Spouse: | Nalini Chidambaram |
Children: | Karti Chidambaram (son) |
Alma Mater: | University of Madras (BSc, LLB) Harvard University (MBA) Loyola College (MA) |
Profession: | Senior Advocate |
Palaniappan Chidambaram (born 16 September 1945), better known as P. Chidambaram, is an Indian politician and lawyer who currently serves as Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha.[1] He served as the Chairman of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs from 2017 to 2018.[2] [3] He also served as Interim Deputy Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha from 2022 to 2023 under Mallikarjun Kharge.
Chidambaram has served as the Union Minister of Finance four times.[4] Most recently, he held the role for the entirety of the United Progressive Alliance government from 2004 to 2014, except for a three-year period as Minister of Home Affairs, during which he oversaw India's domestic security response to the 26/11 terrorist attack in Mumbai. Chidambaram returned as Finance Minister in July 2012, succeeding Pranab Mukherjee, who resigned to become the President of India. He was included in Time 100 list in 2013.[5] He was also the head of Congress Manifesto Committee for 2019 Lok Sabha Elections and 2024 Indian General Elections.[6] [7]
Chidambaram was born to Kandanur L. Ct. L. Palaniappa Chettiar and Lakshmi Achi at Kanadukathan in the Sivaganga district of Tamil Nadu. His maternal grandfather was Raja Sir Annamalai Chettiar, a wealthy merchant and banker from Chettinad.[8]
Chidambaram did his schooling at the Madras Christian College Higher Secondary School, Chennai.[9] He then passed the one-year Pre-university course from Loyola College, Chennai. After graduating with a BSc degree in Statistics from the Presidency College, Chennai, he completed his Bachelor of Laws from the Madras Law College (Dr. Ambedkar Government Law College) and his MBA from Harvard Business School in the class of 1968. He also holds a Master's degree from Loyola College, Chennai.[10]
During this time, his politics inclined to the left and in 1969 he joined N. Ram, later an editor of The Hindu, and the women's activist Mythili Sivaraman in starting a journal called the Radical Review.[11]
Chidambaram has two brothers and one sister.[12] His father's business interests covered textiles, trading and plantations in India. He chose to concentrate on his legal practice and stayed away from the family business.[13]
Chidambaram enrolled as a lawyer in the Madras High Court, becoming a senior advocate in 1984. He had offices in Delhi and Chennai and practiced in the Supreme Court and various high courts of India.
Chidambaram was elected to the Lok Sabha (lower house) of the Indian Parliament from the Sivaganga constituency of Tamil Nadu in general elections held in 1984. He was a union leader for MRF and worked his way up in the Congress party. He was the Tamil Nadu Youth Congress president and then the general secretary of the Tamil Nadu Pradesh Congress Committee unit. He was inducted into the Union (Indian federal) Council of Ministers in the government headed by Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi on 21 September 1985 as a Deputy Minister in the Ministry of Commerce and then in the Ministry of Personnel. His main actions during his tenure in this period was to control the price of tea and he has been criticized by the Government of Sri Lanka for destroying the Sri Lankan tea trade by fixing the prices of the commodity in India using state power. He was elevated to the rank of Minister of State in the Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions in January 1986. In October of the same year, he was appointed to the Ministry of Home Affairs as Minister of State for Internal Security. He continued to hold both offices until general elections were called in 1989. The Indian National Congress government was defeated in the general elections of 1989.
In June 1991, Chidambaram was inducted as a Minister of State (Independent Charge) in the Ministry of Commerce, by the then Prime Minister Mr P V Narasimha Rao; a post he held till July 1992. He was later re-appointed Minister of State (Independent Charge) in the Ministry of Commerce in February 1995 and held the post until April 1996. He made some radical changes in India's export-import (EXIM) policy, while at the Ministry of Commerce.[14] [15]
In 1996, Chidambaram quit the Congress party and joined a breakaway faction of the Tamil Nadu state unit of the Congress party called the Tamil Maanila Congress (TMC). In the general elections held in 1996, TMC along with a few national and regional level opposition parties, formed a coalition government. The coalition government came as a big break for Chidambaram, who was given the key cabinet portfolio of Finance. His 1997 budget is still remembered as the dream budget[16] for the Indian economy. The coalition government was a short-lived one (it fell in 1998), but he was reappointed to the same portfolio in the government formed by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in 2004.
In 1998, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) took the reins of the government for the first time and it was not until May 2004 that Chidambaram would be back in government. Chidambaram became Minister of Finance again in the Congress party led United Progressive Alliance government on 24 May 2004. During the intervening period Chidambaram made some experiments in his political career, leaving the TMC in 2001 and forming his own party, the Congress Jananayaka Peravai, largely focused on the regional politics of Tamil Nadu. The party failed to take off into mainstream Tamil Nadu or national politics. After the elections of 2004, when the Congress won the election he was inducted into the Council of Ministers under the new Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as cabinet Minister of Finance and he merged his party with the mainstream Congress party.[17]
On 30 November 2008, he was appointed the Union Home Minister following the resignation of Shivraj Patil who had come under intense pressure to tender his resignation following a series of terror attacks in India, including the Mumbai attacks on 26 November 2008.
He has been credited with taking the bold decision of prioritising elections above corporate demands to deploy security for the 2009 Indian Premier League.[18]
In 2009, Chidambaram was re-elected from the Sivaganga Lok Sabha constituency in the Congress and retained the Home ministry.[19] He was one of the representatives of the central government when a tri-party agreement was signed with the Gorkha Hill Council and the Government of West Bengal, an agreement which was a result of Mamata Banerjee's effort to end a decade long unrest in the hills of Darjeeling.[20]
The Indian National Congress appointed P. Chidambaram as one of thirteen senior spokespersons on 15 September 2014.[21] He ceded his seat to his son Karti in 2014, which resulted in electoral defeat for his son.[22] [23] [24] [25] In 2016, he was elected as an MP of the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of Indian parliament from the state of Maharashtra.
Elections | Constituency | Party | Result | Vote percentage | Opposition Candidate | Opposition Party | Opposition vote percentage | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1984 Indian general election | Sivaganga | INC | 68.10 | Tha. Kiruttinan | DMK | 51.60 | ||||
1989 Indian general election | Sivaganga | INC | 65.86 | A. Ganesan | DMK | 32.26 | ||||
1991 Indian general election | Sivaganga | INC | 67.49 | V. Kasinathan | DMK | 29.12 | ||||
1996 Indian general election | Sivaganga | TMC(M) | 64.79 | M. Gowri Shankaran | INC | 26.53 | ||||
1998 Indian general election | Sivaganga | TMC(M) | 51.15 | K. Kalimuthu | AIADMK | 41.19 | ||||
1999 Indian general election | Sivaganga | TMC(M) | 20.85 | E. M. Sudarsana Natchiappan | INC | 40.23 | ||||
2004 Indian general election | Sivaganga | INC | 60.01 | S. P. Karuppiah | AIADMK | 35.62 | ||||
2009 Indian general election | Sivaganga | INC | 43.17 | Raja Kannappan | AIADMK | 42.74 |
Chidambaram's mother, Lakshmi Acchi, was the daughter of Sir Annamalai Chettiar, a banker and merchant, and was granted the title of Raja by British. Annamalai Chettiar was the founder of Annamalai University and United India Insurance Company Limited. His brother, Ramaswami Chettiar, was the founder of the Indian Bank and the co-founder of another major bank, the Indian Overseas Bank.[27] [28] [29] [30] [31]
He is married to Nalini Chidambaram, daughter of Justice (Retd.) Palapatti Sadaya Goundar Kailasam, of the Supreme Court, and Mrs. Soundra Kailasam, a renowned Tamil poet and author. Nalini Chidambaram is a senior advocate practising in the Madras High Court and the Supreme Court of India. He has a son, Karti P. Chidambaram, who graduated with a BBA degree from the University of Texas, Austin, and a Masters in Law from the University of Cambridge. Karti, a member of the Congress Party's AICC, is active in Tamil Nadu state politics. Karti is married to Dr. Srinidhi Rangarajan, a well-known Bharathanatyam dancer and medical doctor, working with the Apollo Group of Hospitals in Chennai. Karti and Srinidhi have a daughter, Aditi Nalini Chidambaram.
He suffers from a medical condition referred to as Crohn's disease.[32]
The Voluntary Disclosure of Income Scheme (VDIS) 1997, which he announced when he was Finance Minister with the United Front government, was condemned by the Controller and Auditor General of India as abusive because of the loopholes that made it possible to fudge data to the financial advantage of the confessor.
Chidambaram was criticised for his ministry's failure to prevent the 2011 Mumbai bombings, despite massive investments in security following the 2008 Mumbai attacks. Three years after the 2008 attacks, security preparations were proven to be inadequate with channel breakdown and failures in modernising, procuring, and installing security equipment.[33] Chidambaram defended the agencies under his ministry against the charge of intelligence failure with the response which was later ridiculed by many people in India and its media:
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayaram Jayalalithaa wrote to the Chief Election Commissioner in 2011 that data entry operators at Sivaganga had transferred 3,400 votes polled by Kannappan from 11 polling stations in Chidambaram's favour. News reports suggest that on May 16, 2009, the AIADMK candidate Raja Kannappan was declared elected by 3555 votes at 12.30 pm, and the news was also broadcast on television. But in a dramatic reversal a few hours later, P Chidambaram was declared elected by 3354 votes at 4.30 pm, and was confirmed as the winner after a recount at 8.30 pm.[34]
On 7 April 2009, Chidambaram was assaulted by Sikh journalist Jarnail Singh during a press conference in Delhi on the issue of a "clean chit" to Jagdish Tytler. Singh, who writes for the Hindi daily newspaper Dainik Jagaran was dissatisfied with Chidamabaram's answer to a question on the Central Bureau of Investigation's (CBI) "clean chit" regarding Jagdish Tytler's involvement in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots. It was the first shoe throwing incident in India.[35] [36]
Chidambaram was part of Vedanta's legal team and on its board before becoming finance minister in 2004 [42].[37] In 2002, a year before UK's Financial Services Authority allowed Sterlite to reconstitute itself as Vedanta Resources Plc, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) served a show-cause notice on three of Chairman Anil Agarwal's family. The notice was a demand that Sterlite directors answer allegations about using their holding companies-Volcan and Twinstar-to avoid paying taxes on forex transactions. It was a polite way of saying there was prima facie evidence, dating back to 1993, that the Agarwals were guilty of money laundering. For seven years the case dragged on in courts as Sterlite employed top lawyers to use every possible delaying tactic. P. Chidambaram argued in Sterlite's defence in a 2003 Bombay High Court case related to the ED's allegations. The following year, Chidambaram found himself appointed non-executive director on the board of Vedanta Resources Plc. And very soon, he became finance minister in UPA 1.
Former Union Minister and Senior Advocate Ram Jethmalani's letter to Chidambaram on 6 December 2013 accused him of acting in collusion with the NDTV and laundering Rs 5000 crores of money through Mauritius route back to India.[38]
See main article: INX Media case. In 2006, political leader Dr. Subramanian Swamy alleged that a company controlled by Karti Chidambaram, the son of Minister of Finance P. Chidambaram, received a five-percent share of Aircel to get part of 40 billion paid by Maxis Communications for the 74-percent share of Aircel. According to Swamy, Chidambaram withheld Foreign Investment Promotion Board clearance of the deal until his son received the five-percent share in Siva's company.[39] The issue was raised a number of times in Parliament by the opposition, which demanded Chidambaram's resignation.[40] Although Chidambaram and the then ruling Congress government denied the allegations,[41] The Pioneer and India Today reported the existence of documents showing that Chidambaram delayed approval of the foreign direct investment proposal by about seven months.[42] [43] It was alleged that Chidambaram's son, Karti was a direct beneficiary of the 2G spectrum case. His company, Advantage Strategic Consulting had a five per cent stake in Aircel Televentures, even as his father P Chidambaram, as Finance minister, was alleged to have offered FIPB clearance for the Aircel-Maxis deal only if his son's company, Advantage Strategic Consulting, got shares in Aircel Ventures.[44] The Enforcement Directorate is currently investigating his involvement in Aircel deal.[45] In 2012, and, subsequently, in 2016, information of wide-scale corruption by Chidambaram's son Karti Chidambaram and Robert Vadra, with the help of his father's position, including through the Airtel–Maxis deal and the Uttar Pradesh NRHM scam, was unveiled in prominent newspapers and media in India.[46] Simultaneously, Chidambaram and his son Karti have been dogged with allegations of corruption, misuse of position, insider trading and money laundering.
On 20 August 2019, the Delhi High Court dismissed both anticipatory bail pleas of Chidambaram in connection with corruption charges in the INX Media case during his tenure as Finance minister in UPA Government.[47] [48] [49] On 21 August, he appeared at the Congress HQ and addressed a press conference stating that he was "not accused"; however, he left the place, and, later, he was arrested by the Central Bureau of Investigation and Enforcement Directorate at his home.[50] [51] [52] On 5 September 2019, Supreme Court dismissed his appeal against rejection of anticipatory bail plea by Delhi High Court. The Special Court ordered Chidambaram to stay in judicial custody in Tihar Jail for 14 days. On 4 December he was granted bail by the supreme court.[53]
Chidambaram is a published author of several books.