Naveen Patnaik (born October 16, 1946, Cuttack, India) is an Indian politician and government official in Odisha (Orissa) state, eastern India. He was the founder and longtime president of the Biju Janata Dal (BJD; Biju People’s Party), a regional political party focused on Odisha, and he also served as chief minister (head of government) of the state (2000– ).
Patnaik was born in Cuttack, in what is now Odisha. His father was Bijayananda (Biju) Patnaik, a well-known figure in the movement for Indian independence from Britain and politician in Odisha who served two terms (1961–62 and 1990–95) as the state’s chief minister. Naveen Patnaik completed a B.A. degree from the University of Delhi in 1967 and became a writer. For many years he lived mostly abroad in the United States and elsewhere and had no connection to politics.
Patnaik returned to India shortly before his father’s death in April 1997. In June Naveen—as a member of his father’s party, the Janata Dal (JD; People’s Party)—ran for and won a by-election for his father’s vacant seat in the Lok Sabha (lower chamber of the Indian parliament). He was named to the Consultative Committee of the Ministry of Steel and Mines. In December 1997 he established the BJD after the JD decided not to join the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), a coalition of political parties that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was building to contest the upcoming Lok Sabha elections in 1998. Patnaik, with his BJD a part of the NDA, was successful in the polling, and he was reelected in 1999. In 1998 he was named to head up the Ministry of Steel and Mines (from 1999 the Ministry of Mines and Minerals) in the cabinet of the NDA government.
In 2000 the BJD, in alliance with the BJP, won a large majority of seats in elections to the Odisha state legislative assembly and ousted the long-serving Indian National Congress (Congress Party) from the state government. Patnaik handily beat his Congress Party opponent and, after resigning from his posts in the national government, became the chief minister of Odisha. He was largely perceived as a mild and incorruptible political leader, and his first tenure in office was marked by his attempts to establish a transparent and corruption-free administration. In the process, he had to act against a corrupt bureaucracy and also some senior leaders of the BJD who had been implicated in corruption. His administration also initiated several programs aimed at alleviating poverty in the state.
Patnaik called for early state assembly elections in 2004, and the BJD-BJP alliance won another large majority of seats. Patnaik defeated his Congress opponent by an even larger margin than in 2000, and he became chief minister for the second time. The BJD severed its ties with the BJP prior to the 2009 assembly elections, and, contesting the polls independently, the BJD won its largest margin of victory yet and formed the new state government. The party again outperformed itself in the 2014 elections. The BJD gained an additional one-tenth of the available seats in the state’s legislative assembly, even while most of the country was swept in a wave of BJP victories. It remained strong in the 2019 elections, leading Patnaik to a fifth consecutive term as Odisha’s longest-serving chief minister.
Although early in his political career Patnaik benefited from the reputation of his father, he soon established himself firmly as a popular leader within the state and was lauded as an efficient and honest administrator. However, he was criticized for having difficulty in learning and properly speaking Odia (Oriya; the official language of the state) and for reading speeches in Odia that were transliterated into Roman script. In addition, although he was a critic of the mining policies of the central government—which he believed raised obstacles for economic development in Odisha—he and his administration came under scrutiny for turning a blind eye toward illegal mining activities in the state, which exploited its resources and were detrimental to its ecology.
Patnaik is the author of A Second Paradise: Indian Courtly Life 1590–1947 (1985), A Desert Kingdom: The Rajputs of Bikaner (1990), and The Garden of Life: An Introduction to the Healing Plants of India (1993).