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B. D. Jatti

Vice President of India from 1974 to 1979

B. D. Jatti

Summary

Vice President of India from 1974 to 1979

FieldValue
nameB. D. Jatti
imageBasappa Danappa Jatti, 5th Vice President of India.jpg
captionOffice portrait, 1975
officePresident of India
primeministerIndira Gandhi
Morarji Desai
vicepresidentHimself
term_labelActing
term_start11 February 1977
term_end25 July 1977
predecessorFakhruddin Ali Ahmed
successorNeelam Sanjiva Reddy
office2Vice President of India
president2Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed
Himself (acting)
Neelam Sanjiva Reddy
primeminister2Indira Gandhi
Morarji Desaiterm_start2 = 31 August 1974
term_end230 August 1979
predecessor2Gopal Swarup Pathak
successor2Mohammad Hidayatullah
office3Governor of Odisha
1blankname3Chief Minister
1namedata3Nandini Satpathy
term_start38 November 1972
term_end320 August 1974
predecessor3Sardar Jogendra Singh
Gati Krushna Misra (acting)
successor3Gati Krushna Misra (acting)
Akbar Ali Khan
office4Lieutenant Governor of Pondicherry
1blankname4Chief Minister
1namedata4Hasan Farook
term_start414 October 1968
term_end47 November 1972
predecessor4S. L. Silam
successor4Chhedi Lal
office5Chief Minister of Mysore Stategovernor5 =Jayachamarajendra Wadiyar
term_start516 May 1958
term_end59 March 1962
predecessor5Siddavanahalli Nijalingappa
successor5S. R. Kanthi
office6Member of the Legislative Assembly, Karnataka
term_start626 March 1952
term_end612 October 1968
predecessor6Constituency established
successor6S. M. Athani
constituency6Jamkhandi
birth_nameBasappa Danappa Jatti
birth_date
birth_placeSavalagi, Jamakhandi, Bombay Presidency, British India
(present-day Karnataka, India)
death_date
death_placeBangalore, Karnataka, India (present-day Bengaluru)
partyIndian National Congress
occupationPolitician
alma_materRajaram College
order
order2
order1

Morarji Desai Himself (acting) Neelam Sanjiva Reddy Morarji Desai| term_start2 = 31 August 1974 Gati Krushna Misra (acting) Akbar Ali Khan (present-day Karnataka, India)

Basappa Danappa "**B. D.''''" **Jatti''' (, 10 September 1912 – 7 June 2002) was the vice president of India, serving from 1974 to 1979. He was the acting president of India from 11 February to 25 July 1977. He also served as the chief minister of Karnataka. Jatti rose from a being a Municipality member to India's second-highest office during a five-decade-long chequered political career.

Early life

Jatti was born into a Banajiga family, a sub-sect of the Lingayat community, in Savalgi, Jamkhandi Taluk of Bagalkot district (formerly Bijapur district), Karnataka. on 10 September 1912. His parents were Danappa Jatti and Sangamma. Jatti studied at the PB High School Jamkhandi and obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree from Rajaram College and a degree in law from the Sykes Law College, Kolhapur. Jatti practiced as a lawyer for a while in Jamkhandi before being elected to the Jamkhandi municipality in 1940 and going on to become its president. He was elected to the Jamakhandi State Legislature, becoming a minister and subsequently its chief minister.

Early political career

In 1940, he entered politics as a Municipality member at Jamkhandi and subsequently became the president of the Jamkhandi Town Municipality in 1945. Later, he was elected as a member of the Jamkhandi State Legislature and was appointed a minister in the government of the princely state of Jamkhandi. Finally, he became the 'dewan' (chief minister) of Jamkhandi state in 1948. As dewan, he maintained cordial relations with the Maharaja, Shankar Rao Patwardhan, and brought about the accession of the small principality to the Indian Union. On 8 March 1948 after Jamkhandi was merged with Bombay state, he returned to legal practice and continued with it for 20 months.

Later, Jatti was nominated as a member of the Bombay State Legislative Assembly to represent the merged area, and within a week of his nomination, he was appointed Parliamentary Secretary to the then Bombay chief minister, B. G. Kher. He worked in that capacity for a couple of years. After the 1952 general elections, he was appointed Minister of Health and Labour of the then Bombay government and held that post till the reorganization of states. His autobiography, 'I'm my own model', is very popular.

Chief minister of Mysore state

Jatti became a member of the Mysore Legislative Assembly after the reorganization and was Chairman of the Land Reforms Committee, which paved the way for the 1961 Mysore Land Reforms Act (which abolished the tenancy system and absentee landlordism). He was the chief minister and Kadidal Manjappa was the revenue minister when the bill was adopted. In 1958, when S. Nijalingappa stepped down as chief minister of the state, Jatti was elected leader of the party in the face of a stiff challenge from Congress veteran T. Subramanya. He became the chief minister of Mysore in 1958 and continued in that office until 1962.

In the assembly election of 1962 to the Mysore Legislative Assembly, Jatti was reelected from Jamkhandi. He however was forced to resign as chief minister since he did not command the support of a majority of elected legislators of the Congress Party and was succeeded by S. R. Kanthi.

Later political career

Jatti being sworn in as Vice President of India (1974)

Jatti subsequently was Lieutenant Governor of Pondicherry from October 1968 to November 1972. Jatti was appointed Governor of Orissa in November 1972. On 1 March 1973 the ruling Congress government led by Nandini Satpathy resigned after it lost its majority in the legislative assembly. Although the leader of the opposition, Biju Patnaik, staked his claim to form the government and demonstrated the support of a majority of legislators, Jatti chose to prorogue the assembly session on the advice of Sathpathy and on 3 March 1973 recommended President’s rule in the state. Jatti, with the aid of advisors administered the state during the period of President’s Rule which continued until March 1974. He resigned as governor in August 1974 to contest in the vice presidential election of 1974.

Vice Presidency

In the election, Jatti defeated the opposition candidate N.E. Horo winning 521 votes in the electoral college against 141 polled by Horo. Jatti was declared elected on 27 August 1974 and sworn in as the vice president of India on 31 August 1974. Following the death in office of Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed on 11 February 1977, Jatti was sworn in as the acting president of India the same day. Following the defeat of the Indian National Congress in the general elections of 1977, Jatti asked Indira Gandhi to continue as caretaker prime minister and, on the recommendation of the Cabinet, revoked the Emergency on 21 March 1977. Jatti swore in Morarji Desai as prime minister on 24 March 1977. In April 1977, the new government recommended the dismissal of governments and the dissolution of legislative assemblies in states ruled by the Congress Party. Although Jatti initially hesitated to accept the Cabinet’s recommendation, he agreed to it a day later and dismissed governments in nine states. Jatti was succeeded by Neelam Sanjiva Reddy as President of India on 25 July 1977 following his unopposed election to the presidency in the presidential election of 1977.

Public offices held

  • 1945–48: Minister for Education in the erstwhile princely state of Jamkhandi
  • 1948: Chief Minister (dewan) of Jamkhandi
  • 1948–52: Parliamentary Secretary in the B. G. Kher Government in erstwhile Bombay State
  • 1953–56: Deputy Minister for Health and Labour in the Morarji Desai Government in Bombay
  • 1958–62: Chief Minister of Mysore state
  • 1962–68: Cabinet minister, Government of Mysore
  • 1968–72: Lieutenant Governor of Pondicherry
  • 1972–74: Governor of Odisha
  • 1974–79: Vice-President of India
  • Acting President for six months in 1977

Personal life and family

His great grandson Dhruv Jatti is a spokesperson of the Indian National Congress party and the founder of Indian Student Community, a non profit organization focused on empowering youth.

Religious activities

A deeply religious man, Jatti was the founder president of the "Basava Samithi", a religious organisation which propagated the preachings of 12th-century saint, philosopher and reformer of Lingayat community Basaveshwara. The Basava samithi established in 1964 has published many books on Lingayatism and Sharanas and has got the 'vachanas' of sharanas translated into various languages. He was also involved in various organisations concerned with social activities.

Vice President Ansari at the birth centenary celebrations of Vice President Jatti

Death and legacy

He died on 7 June 2002. He was hailed as a man who set an example of selfless service and stood for value-based politics. He was once called an ordinary man with extraordinary thought, and he named his autobiography, I'm My Own Model. His centenary celebrations were held in 2012.

Notes

References

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References

  1. http://kla.kar.nic.in/assembly/member/4assemblymemberslist.htm Fourth Karnataka Legislative Assembly (ನಾಲ್ಕನೇ ಕರ್ನಾಟಕ ವಿಧಾನ ಸಭೆ)
  2. (2013-05-08). "B.D. Jatti {{!}} Chief Minister of Karnataka {{!}} Personalities".
  3. Special Correspondent. (8 September 2012). "B.D. Jatti birth centenary on Monday". The Hindu.
  4. Basava Samiti. (9 May 2013). ".::basavasamithi.in::.".
  5. "Shri B.D. Jatti". Orissa Reference Annual 2004.
  6. (3 June 2013). "About Shri B.D. Jatti". Basava Samiti.
  7. "Shri B.D. Jatti". Orissa Reference Annual 2004.
  8. (8 June 2002). "His simplicity survived rewards of public life". [[The Hindu]].
  9. (3 February 2018). "B D Jatti". MapsofIndia.com.
  10. "STATISTICAL REPORT ON GENERAL ELECTION, 1962 TO THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF MYSORE". Election Commission of India.
  11. "General Elections: Mysore". Press Information Bureau.
  12. (1962). "The Organizational Development of India's Congress Party". Pacific Affairs.
  13. "LG Secretariat - Lt.Governor's Profile". Lieutenant Governor of Puducherry Secretariat.
  14. "UNION TERRITORY OF PONDICHERRY".
  15. "ORISSA LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY".
  16. (1978). "GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS IN ORISSA SINCE INDEPENDENCE—AN OVERVIEW". The Indian Journal of Political Science.
  17. (1994). "ORISSA POLITICS". The Indian Journal of Political Science.
  18. "Election to Office of Vice President of India: Change in address of a Contesting Candidate". Official Gazette Government of Goa, Daman and Diu.
  19. (2017). "ELECTION TO THE OFFICE OF VICE-PRESIDENT OF INDIA 2017". Election Commission of India.
  20. "Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed, News Photo, President of India Fakhruddin ...". Times of India.
  21. "The San Francisco Examiner 11 Feb 1977, page 12". Newspapers.com.
  22. "The Los Angeles Times 12 Feb 1977, page 10". Newspapers.com.
  23. (23 March 2015). "Indira Gandhi loses election: from the archive, 23 March 1977". the Guardian.
  24. "Indian Opposition Gains a Majority". Washington Post.
  25. (30 December 2021). "When Indira Gandhi decided to storm the Golden Temple". The Indian Express.
  26. "The San Francisco Examiner 24 Mar 1977, page 20". Newspapers.com.
  27. (24 March 2022). "HT This Day: March 25, 1977 -- Desai sworn in Prime Minister". Hindustan Times.
  28. "The Los Angeles Times 01 May 1977, page 4". Newspapers.com.
  29. (1 May 1977). "Constitutional Conflict Ends in India as Acting President Accepts Order Dissolving Nine State Legislatures". The New York Times.
  30. (30 April 1977). "New Indian Regime Moves to Hold New Assembly Elections in 9 States". The New York Times.
  31. "The Daily Telegraph 07 May 1977, page 9". Newspapers.com.
  32. (22 April 2015). "The judiciary: Better late than never?". India Today.
  33. (30 May 2018). "Rewind, and the press to play". The Economic Times.
  34. (26 July 2017). "Forty Years Ago, July 26, 1977: President Sworn In". The Indian Express.
  35. (3 February 2022). "The 12/11 Controversy". Outlook.
  36. "Daily News 22 Jul 1977, page 198". Newspapers.com.
  37. "Former vice presidents bio-profiles". Vice President of India.
  38. "About Us". Basava samiti.
  39. (2002). "Community Dominance and Political Modernisation: The Lingayats". By Shankaragouda Hanamantagouda Patil.
  40. "Memories of Founder Sri.B.D.Jatti". Basava samiti.
  41. (8 June 2002). "B.D.Jatti dead". [[The Hindu]].
  42. (8 June 2002). "Governor, CM condole Jatti's death". [[The Hindu]].
  43. "Simple man with a lofty office". Deccan Herald.
  44. (10 September 2012). "Quality of public life has declined: Governor". The Hindu.
  45. (9 September 2012). "B.D. Jatti birth centenary on Monday". The Hindu.
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