Veerendra Patil Explained

Veerendra Patil
Office:5th Chief Minister of Karnataka
Term Start:30 November 1989
Office1:7th Chief Minister of Mysore State
Term End:10 October 1990
Predecessor:S. R. Bommai
Successor:S. Bangarappa
Term Start1:29 May 1968
Term End1:18 March 1971
Predecessor1:S. Nijalingappa
Successor1:President's rule
Office2:Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha
Constituency2:Gulbarga
Term Start2:1984
Term End2:1989
Predecessor2:C. M. Stephen
Successor2:B. G. Jawali
Constituency3:Bagalkot
Term Start3:1980
Term End3:1984
Predecessor3:Sanganagouda Basanagouda Patil
Successor3:Patil Hanmantagouda Bhimanagouda
Office4:Minister of Public Works and Transport Department of Karnataka
Term Start4:14 March 1962
Term End4:20 June 1962
Office5:Minister of Labour and Employment of India
Term Start5:2 September 1982
Term End5:31 December 1984
Birth Place:Chincholi, Hyderabad State, British India
(now in Karnataka, India)
Death Date:[1]
Death Place:Bangalore, Karnataka, India
Party:Indian National Congress

Veerendra Basappa Patil (Kannada: ವೀರೇಂದ್ರ ಪಾಟೀಲ್; 28 February 1924  - 14 March 1997)[2] was a senior Indian politician and was twice, the Chief Minister of Karnataka. He became Chief Minister for the first time from 1968–1971 and the second time was almost 18 years later, from 1989–1990.

Biography

Born in a middle-class family in Chincholi in Kalaburagi district, Patil belonged to the dominant Banajiga Lingayat community.[3] He was first made a Deputy minister for Home in the S. Nijalingappa government in 1957. He was elected several times from Chincholi assembly constituency of Gulbarga district to the Karnataka Legislative Assembly. In his youth, Patil teamed up with Ramakrishna Hegde and took control of the Congress organisation in the state. Being young and charismatic ministers in Nijalingappa cabinet, they both were referred as 'Lava-Kusha'. When he moved to federal politics, Nijalingappa chose Patil as his successor.[4]

Patil's first innings as Chief minister lasted 33 months and 10 days. His control over the state administration dispelled the impression that he was just a dummy for his mentor, Nijalingappa, then the president of the All India Congress Committee.

It was during his tenure that the century-old Cauvery water dispute gained ground as Tamil Nadu objected to the irrigation projects in the Cauvery basin. Patil went ahead with the projects even though the Central Water Commission refused to clear them, to protect the interests of the farmers of the south Karnataka region who were heavily dependent on irrigation from Cauvery. Also, It was he who promoted the Karnataka Power Corporation and separated the state electricity board from the responsibility of generating power.

However, Patil was also charged with favouring his Lingayat (Banajiga) community.[3] After the Congress split in 1969, Patil's Congress (O) party remained in power in the state until 1971 and crashed to a dismal defeat in the state assembly election in 1972 at the hands of Congress (I).

Later, Patil returned to the hub of state politics as chief of the Janata Party's Karnataka state unit. He sacrified in the 1978 Lok Sabha by-election in Chikmagalur which featured Indira Gandhi in the fray. Through the often acrimonious campaign, Patil, who was the candidate of the Janata Party, refused to indulge in personal attacks on Indira Gandhi. The same year, he lost his Rajya Sabha seat to Hegde. When he lost the state Janata Party presidency to H.D. Deve Gowda, Patil moved over to Indira Gandhi's Congress-I.[5]

The twin defections of Veerendra Patil in Karnataka & Hitendra Desai in Gujarat turned around the fortunes of Congress(I), which otherwise had a spate of allegations against it. Winning election to the Lok Sabha from Bagalkot, he became Union Labour and Petroleum minister. However, he was later dropped from the Cabinet.

He won Gulbarga seat in 1984 Indian general elections by defeating Vidyadhar Guruji, a former MLA from Gurmitkal.[6]

With none of the state congress leaders able to draw the masses, the state leadership fell onto Veerendra Patil's shoulders. As state party chief in Rajiv Gandhi's time, Patil reinvigorated the Congress in the state. The anti incumbency wave and the split in the Janata party resulted in a landslide victory for the Congress in November 1989. Veerendra Patil had led the election campaign on twin promises: Water & Transport facility to every village. Congress won 178 out of 224 MLA seats, which is its largest victory to-date (2020).[7]

With fiscal deficit reigning high & diminishing returns, Veerendra Patil took charge at a difficult time.[8] He appointed M. Rajasekara Murthy as finance minister. The duo attacked the seconds liquor lobby by hiking the export duty by 10 times, from 2% to 20%. This had the dual-effect of reducing seconds-liquor consumption and also boosting the revenue of state government. It is to Patil's credit that he summoned the courage to take on the liquor lobby, at the risk of angering many benefactors of his party. He stuck to the line that his duty was first to the state and then, next to his party. This honesty proved dearly to him, though he became widely popular among the woman-folk of the state.

His efforts to streamline the administration and stem the rot in the secretariat was acclaimed by many.[9] However, in October 1990 communal riots broke out in some parts of the state due to newly emerged BJP's rath yatras and communal politics. He was removed by the then Congress President Rajiv Gandhi and succeeded by Sarekoppa Bangarappa.

Patil never recouped after this incident. His health failed him and he decided against contesting the 1994 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election. Congress lost miserably and could not even become the main opposition party in that election.

He died on 14 March 1997 in Bangalore.[1]

Notes and References

  1. News: 15 March 1997. Veerendra Patil Is Dead. Business Standard. 5 May 2017. 5 May 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170505091344/http://www.business-standard.com/article/economy-policy/veerendra-patil-is-dead-197031501113_1.html. live.
  2. Web site: States after 1947 A-L . Rulers: India . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20100622004909/http://rulers.org/indstat3.html . 22 June 2010 .
  3. Book: Thomas Blom Hansen . Christophe Jaffrelot. The BJP and the compulsions of politics in India . 2001. 176 . The Lingayat votes had been important to the Janata Dal since 1978. Without Veerendra Patil (a member of the Banajiga jati), the long-standing difficulties of the national party president S. R. Bommai in appealing to voters beyond his Sadar jati (which had earned the resentment of other jatis by gaining a disproportionate share of spoils) became especially serious.
  4. Web site: Veerendra Patil- Biography . Veethi . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20120421060400/http://www.veethi.com/india-people/veerendra_patil-profile-585-19.htm . 21 April 2012 .
  5. Web site: Veerendra Patil, Karnataka politician, dies at 73 . Rediff on the net . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20100530055322/http://www.rediff.com//news/mar/14patil.htm . 30 May 2010 .
  6. News: Freedom fighter Vidyadhar Guruji dies aged 105 . . 30 July 2017 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20201109042152/https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/karnataka/freedom-fighter-vidyadhar-guruji-dies-aged-105/article19390059.ece . 9 November 2020 . Para . Praveen B. .
  7. Web site: Highlights of 1989 Karnataka Assembly Elections . Party Analyst . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20130206013937/http://partyanalyst.com/electionDetailsReportAction.action?electionId=122&stateID=12&stateName=Karnataka&electionType=Assembly&electionTypeId=2&year=1989 . 6 February 2013 .
  8. Web site: Chief Minister Veerendra Patil, taking oath . Raj bhavan, Karnataka . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20070321085604/http://rajbhavan.kar.nic.in/ophotoalbum/pages/venkat2%20_jpg.htm . 21 March 2007 .
  9. News: Veerendra Patil had just 13 ministers. https://archive.today/20130104065719/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-02-16/bangalore/31066064_1_ministers-clear-files-work-culture. dead. 4 January 2013. The Times of India. 16 February 2012.