Second N. Chandrababu Naidu ministry

The Second N. Chandrababu Naidu ministry or the Nineteenth ministry of United Andhra Pradesh of the state of United Andhra Pradesh was formed on 11 October 1999 headed by N. Chandrababu Naidu as the Chief Minister following the 1999 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election. The cabinet was sworn in a simple ceremony held at Raj Bhavan, Hyderabad. Initially the chief minister and eight other ministers of his council of ministers were administered the oath of office and secrecy by the then Governor C. Rangarajan. The cabinet was later expanded and reshuffled for four times citing several reasons on different occasions during the five year tenure to end on 14 May 2004.[1][2]

Second N. Chandrababu Naidu ministry

19th Ministry of United Andhra Pradesh
Date formed11 October 1999
Date dissolved14 May 2004
People and organisations
Head of state
Head of governmentN. Chandrababu Naidu
Chief Minister
Member parties  Telugu Desam Party
Status in legislature Majority
180 / 294(61%)
Opposition party  Indian National Congress
Opposition leaderY. S. Rajasekhara Reddy
History
Election(s)1999
Outgoing election1994
Legislature term(s)5 years
PredecessorFirst N. Chandrababu Naidu ministry
SuccessorFirst Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy ministry

Background

The 1999 Andhra Pradesh legislative assembly elections were swept by the Telugu Desam Party (TDP). The TDP bagged 180 seats in the election and formed the government. N. Chandrababu Naidu incumbent chief minister of United Andhra Pradesh continued to be the chief minister for the second term.[3] The Second N. Chandrababu Naidu Ministry was initially constituted with a nine member council consisting of the chief minister and other eight ministers on 11 October 1999 with a formal oath taking ceremony at the Raj Bhavan, Hyderabad constituted by the then Governor C Rangarajan. The eight ministers constituted a combination of seven cabinet rank ministers and one minister of state. The cabinet was expanded by inducting twenty six new ministers, Increasing the strength of the cabinet to thirty five. Besides the chief minister, the council consisted of twenty six cabinet ministers and eight ministers of state on 22 October 1999.[4] Later with the assassination of the incumbent cabinet rank minister Alimineti Madhava Reddy on 7 March 2000, his wife Uma Madhava Reddy was inducted into the cabinet to substitute the vacant ministry post on 6 November 2000.[5]

Later with the death of the incumbent minister Karnam Ramachandra Rao on 13 May 2002 due to ill health[6] and the resignation of other two incumbent ministers, where the Suddala Devaiah, minister of state quit of murder charge on 17 June 2002[7][8] and Pocharam Srinivas Reddy in September 2002 on allegations in the involvement of the minister in a corruption, paved way for another set of expansion and reshuffling of the council.[9] On 11 September 2002, the council had a minor reshuffling with the ministerial duties of the existing ministers, and inducting three new ministers into the cabinet.[10] The council reshuffling majorly involved the induction of ministers from the Telangana region.[11][12] The council further remained the same until the end of the legislative tenure i.e 14 May 2004.[13]

Prior to the minor council reshuffling in 2002, the council witnessed a major council reshuffling in 2001. On 26 November 2001, the council was reshuffled by dropping eight ministers and inducting eleven new ones. Council consisting of six cabinet-rank ministers and five ministers of state. The strength of the council stood at thirty nine ministers as of 2001, with twenty nine cabinet-rank ministers and ten ministers of state. [14]

Achievements

The Second N. Chandrababu Naidu ministry witnessed the implementation of new reforms in the field of information and technology in the state of Andhra Pradesh.[15][16][17]

Council of Ministers

Portfolio Minister Constituency Tenure Party
Took office Left office
Chief Minister
Other departments not allocated to a Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu Kuppam 11 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Cabinet Ministers
Finance, Commercial Tax, Excise, Legislative affairs, Planning and Revenue Ashok Gajapathi Raju Vizianagaram 11 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
  • Home affairs, Jails, Fire services, NCC, Sainik Welfare, Film Development Corporation and Cinematography
Tulla Devender Goud Medchal 11 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Home affairs, Jails, Fire service Alimineti Madhava Reddy Bhongir 11 October 1999 7 March 2000 TDP
B. Vishwa Mohan Reddy Yemmiganur 11 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Finance & Planning, Commercial Taxes, Legislative Affairs Yanamala Ramakrishnudu Tuni 11 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Education Vadde Sobhanadreeswara Rao Mylavaram 11 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
K. Vijayarama Rao Khairatabad 11 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Medical and Health Aruna Sanakkayala Guntur-II 22 October 1999 26 November 2001 TDP
Forest & Environment and Science & Technology Chintakayala Ayyanna Patrudu Narispatnam 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
P. Chandrasekhar Mahbubnagar 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Higher Education N. M. D. Farooq Nandyal 22 October 1999 11 September 2002 TDP
11 September 2002 14 May 2004 TDP
Health Nagam Janardhan Reddy Nagarkurnool 22 October 1999 11 September 2002 TDP
11 September 2002 14 May 2004 TDP
Lakshmi Padmavathi Parchur 22 October 1999 26 November 2001 TDP
Heavy Water Irrigation Projects Thummala Nageswara Rao Sathupalli 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
K. E. Prabhakar Dhone 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Women and Social welfare department K. Pushpaleela Ibrahimpatnam 22 October 1999 26 November 2001 TDP
Chikkala Ramachandra Rao Tallarevu 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Higher Education Karnam Ramachandra Rao Medak 22 October 1999 13 May 2002 TDP
Law and justice, Stamps and Registrations and Municipal administration Tammineni Sitaram Amadalavalasa 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Endowments Dandu Sivarama Raju Undi 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Marketing, Social Welfare, Education and Irrigation Kadiyam Srihari Ghanpur (Station) 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Pocharam Srinivas Reddy Banswada 22 October 1999 5 September 2002 RES [lower-alpha 1] TDP
Kothapalli Subbarayudu Narsapuram 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Minor Irrigation, Agriculture and Minister for Animal Husbandry Veera Reddy Bijivemula Badvel 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Mandava Venkateshwara Rao Nizamabad Rural 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Large scale industries Kotagiri Vidyadhara Rao Chintalapudi 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Information & Public relations and Culture Naramalli Sivaprasad Chittoor 22 October 1999 [lower-alpha 2] 26 November 2001 TDP
Mines & Geology Uma Madhava Reddy Bhongir 6 November 2000 14 May 2004 TDP
Chandra Mohana Reddy Somireddy Sarvepalli 26 November 2001 14 May 2004 TDP
Labour & Tourism Talasani Srinivas Yadav Secunderabad 26 November 2001 14 May 2004 TDP
Bojjala Gopala Krishna Reddy Sri Kalahasti 26 November 2001 14 May 2004 TDP
J. R. Pushparaj Tadikonda 26 November 2001 14 May 2004 TDP
P. Ramasubba Reddy Jammalamadugu 26 November 2001 14 May 2004 TDP
Kodela Siva Prasada Rao Narasaraopet 26 November 2001 11 September 2002 TDP
11 September 2002 14 May 2004 TDP
Muddasani Damodar Reddy Kamalapur 11 September 2002 14 May 2004 TDP
Nerella Anjaneyulu Yellareddy 11 September 2002 14 May 2004 TDP
Pally Babu Mohan Andole 11 September 2002 14 May 2004 TDP
C. Muthyam Reddy Dommat 11 September 2002 14 May 2004 TDP
Ministers of State
Social Welfare, Women Welfare & Family welfare Somineni Saraswati Kodur 11 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
P. Bhumanna Adilabad 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Handloom Kristappa Nimmala Gorantla 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
C. Krishna Yadav Himayathnagar 22 October 1999 26 November 2001 TDP
M. Mani Kumari Araku 22 October 1999 14 May 2004 TDP
Enugala Peddi Reddy Huzurabad 22 October 1999 26 November 2001 TDP
Housing A. Prabhakar Reddy Alur 22 October 1999 26 November 2001 TDP
Education Alapati Rajendra Prasad Vemuru 22 October 1999 26 November 2001 TDP
Animal Husbandry and Fisheries N Narasimha Rao Bandar 22 October 1999 [lower-alpha 2] 14 May 2004 TDP
Damacharla Anjaneyulu Kondapi 26 November 2001 14 May 2004 TDP
Muddasani Damodar Reddy Kamalapur 26 November 2001 11 September 2002 TDP
Suddala Devaiah Narella 26 November 2001 17 June 2002 RES TDP
Pathivada Narayanaswamy Naidu Bhogapuram 26 November 2001 14 May 2004 TDP
Pothuganti Ramulu Achampet 26 November 2001 14 May 2004 TDP

Notes

  1. Date of resignation is unclear
  2. Minister did not take oath on this mentioned date

See also

References

  1. Naidu's nine-member cabinet sworn in
  2. "Naidu not a frequent shuffler". The Times of India. 24 November 2001. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  3. "Andhra Pradesh elections: Chandrababu Naidu sweeps polls, but reforms yet to pay off". India Today. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  4. "Chandrababu Naidu expands ministry". Rediff. 22 October 1999. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  5. "rediff.com: Naidu to induct former minister's widow into cabinet". m.rediff.com. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  6. "Andhra minister Ramachandra Rao passes away". The Times of India. 14 May 2002. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  7. "Ministry happy over Devaiah's exit". The Times of India. 20 June 2002. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  8. "rediff.com: Andhra minister quits over murder charge". m.rediff.com. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  9. "Minister pleads innocence in scam". The Times of India. 5 September 2002. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  10. "3 new ministers inducted in AP Cabinet". The Times of India. 12 September 2002. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  11. "Naidu inducts three new faces". gulfnews.com. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  12. "rediff.com: Naidu effects minor Cabinet reshuffle". m.rediff.com. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  13. "Speculations over Cabinet reshuffle". The Times of India. 10 September 2002. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  14. "AP Cabinet reshuffled". Arab News. 27 November 2001. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  15. World, Geospatial (5 January 2002). "Naidu on mission to e-enable rural masses". Geospatial World. Retrieved 16 April 2023.
  16. "Archive News: Archive Latest News, Archive Today news, Archive Breaking News". Financialexpress. Retrieved 16 April 2023.
  17. "Confident steps". frontline.thehindu.com. 11 March 2004. Retrieved 16 April 2023.
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