Second Naveen Patnaik ministry

Second Naveen Patnaik ministry

27th Ministry of Odisha
2004–2009
Date formed16 May 2004
Date dissolved20 May 2009
People and organisations
GovernorM. M. Rajendran
Rameshwar Thakur
Murlidhar Chandrakant Bhandare
Chief MinisterNaveen Patnaik
No. of ministers22
Member partiesNDA 93
  BJD 61
  BJP 32
Status in legislatureMajority
93 / 147 (63%)
Opposition partyUPA
Opposition leaderJanaki Ballabh Patnaik (2004-2009)
Ramachandra Ulaka (2009)
History
Election2004
Legislature terms5 years, 4 days
PredecessorFirst Naveen Patnaik ministry
SuccessorThird Naveen Patnaik ministry

Naveen Patnaik was elected as the chief minister of Odisha for the second time in 2004 after NDA secured a landslide victory in the 2004 Odisha Legislative Assembly election. The elections were called early[1] and were held in the state in two phases coinciding with 2004 Indian general election. The results were declared on 13 May 2004. NDA secured 93 seats out of 147 in the thirteenth Odisha Legislative Assembly. BJD secured 61 seats while BJP secured 32 seats, upsetting the Congress party which was led by former CM Janaki Ballabh Patnaik. This was a saving grace for the NDA as it lost the 2004 Indian general election.[2]

Brief history

Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik along with 14 Cabinet Ministers and 7 Minister of State with Independent Charges were administered the oath of office and secrecy by Governor M. M. Rajendran at the Raj Bhavan, Bhubaneswar on 16 May 2004. The BJD had the larger share of representation in the ministry with 14 ministers including the Chief Minister while the BJP had eight.[3][4]

The first Cabinet reshuffle took place on 17 May 2006 after the resignation of 3 ministers in the previous month.[5] Second Cabinet reshuffle took place on 5 February 2008 where oath was administered by Governor Murlidhar Chandrakant Bhandare at the Raj Bhavan, Bhubaneswar.[6]

Council of Ministers

Source
Portfolio Portrait Name Tenure Party
Naveen Patnaik
MLA from Hinjili
16 May 2004 20 May 2009 BJD
16 May 2004 16 May 2006 BJD
23 March 2006 20 May 2009 BJD
5 May 2008 BJD
10 December 2008 BJD
9 March 2009 BJD
Cabinet Minister
Surendra Nath Naik
MLA from Kakatpur
16 May 2004 20 May 2009 BJD
Pramila Mallik
MLA from Binjharpur
16 May 2004 20 May 2009 BJD
Prafulla Chandra Ghadei
MLA from Sukinda
16 May 2004 20 May 2009 BJD
Ananga Udaya Singh Deo
MLA from Bolangir
16 May 2004 20 May 2009 BJD
Bijayshree Routray
MLA from Basudevpur
16 May 2004 16 May 2006 BJD
Surjya Narayan Patro
MLA from Mohana
16 May 2004 20 May 2009 BJD
16 May 2006 BJD
Debiprasad Mishra
MLA from Baramba
5 February 2008 20 May 2009 BJD
Damodar Rout
MLA from Ersama
16 May 2004 16 May 2006 BJD
Surjya Narayan Patro
MLA from Mohana
17 May 2006 20 May 2009 BJD
Damodar Rout
MLA from Ersama
16 May 2004 16 May 2006 BJD
Raghunath Mohanty
MLA from Basta
17 May 2006 20 May 2009 BJD
Padmanabha Behera
MLA from Phulbani
16 May 2004 29 December 2007 BJD
16 May 2006 BJD
Raghunath Mohanty
MLA from Basta
17 May 2006 20 May 2009 BJD
Padmanabha Behera
MLA from Phulbani
17 May 2006 4 February 2008 BJD
Duryodhan Majhi
MLA from Khariar
5 February 2008 20 May 2009 BJD
BJD
Kalindi Behera
MLA from Salipur
16 May 2004 16 May 2006 BJD
BJD
Debiprasad Mishra
MLA from Baramba
5 February 2008 20 May 2009 BJD
Chaitanya Prasad Majhi
MLA from Bangriposi
17 May 2006 20 May 2009 BJD
Bishnu Charan Das
MLA from Jagatsinghpur
17 May 2006 12 August 2007[7] BJD
Biswabhusan Harichandan
MLA from Bhubaneswar
16 May 2004 9 March 2009 BJP
Samir Dey
MLA from Cuttack City
16 May 2004 9 March 2009 BJP
Kanak Vardhan Singh Deo
MLA from Patnagarh
16 May 2004 9 March 2009 BJP
Golak Bihari Naik
MLA from Khunta
16 May 2004 9 March 2009 BJP
Manmohan Samal
MLA from Dhamnagar
16 May 2004 10 December 2008[8] BJP
Ministers of State with Independent Charges
Debasis Nayak
MLA from Bari-Derabisi
16 May 2004 4 May 2008[9] BJD
Balabhadra Majhi
MLA from Narla
16 May 2004 16 May 2006 BJD
Rabi Narayan Nanda
MLA from Jeypore
16 May 2004 23 March 2006[10] BJD
BJD
Sanjeeb Kumar Sahoo
MLA from Birmaharajpur
17 May 2006 4 February 2008 BJD
Nagendra Kumar Pradhan
MLA from Athmallik
16 May 2004 16 May 2006 BJD
Sanjeeb Kumar Sahoo
MLA from Birmaharajpur
13 August 2007 20 May 2009 BJD
Duryodhan Majhi
MLA from Khariar
17 May 2006 4 February 2008 BJD
Sanatan Bisi
MLA from Rairakhol
5 February 2008 20 May 2009 BJD
Debiprasad Mishra
MLA from Baramba
17 May 2006 4 February 2008 BJD
Pradip Kumar Amat
MLA from Boudh
5 February 2008 20 May 2009 BJD
Surama Padhy
MLA from Ranpur
16 May 2004 9 March 2009 BJP
Jayanarayan Mishra
MLA from Sambalpur
16 May 2004 9 March 2009 BJP
29 April 2006 4 February 2008 BJP
Pradipta Kumar Naik
MLA from Bhawanipatna
16 May 2004 29 April 2006[11] BJP
5 February 2008 9 March 2009 BJP

References

  1. ^ "Orissa assembly dissolved". www.rediff.com. Retrieved 16 June 2025.
  2. ^ Misra, Surya N. (2004). "Ruling Coalition Returns". Economic and Political Weekly. 39 (51): 5521–5523. ISSN 0012-9976. JSTOR 4415948.
  3. ^ "Naveen sworn in as Orissa CM". The Times of India. 16 May 2004. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 15 June 2025.
  4. ^ "22-member BJD-BJP ministry in Orissa sworn-in". Hindustan Times.
  5. ^ "Reshuffle in State Government!". Orissa Matters. 16 May 2006. Retrieved 15 June 2025.
  6. ^ "Orissa CM inducts 3 new ministers, elevates 2 others". The Times of India. 5 February 2008. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 15 June 2025.
  7. ^ "Scam hits minister son". Telegraph India.
  8. ^ "Orissa minister resigns over sex scandal". Hindustan Times.
  9. ^ "Debasis Nayak was out of Naveen's charmed circle long before quitting BJD". Hindustan Times.
  10. ^ "Orissa minister quits over criminal links". Hindustan Times.
  11. ^ "A hattrick of resignations". Telegraph India.