Born in 1914, Ghosh grew up in Khulna.[3] In 1930 he moved to Calcutta, where he joined the student movement.[3] Around 1935/1936 he became a member of the Bengal Labour Party and active in workers activism.[3] After about a year, he became a card-carrying member of the Communist Party of India (along with other Labour Party members).[3] When the Labour Party broke with CPI, he renounced his CPI party membership.[3]
Return to the Communist Party
In 1945 he again joined CPI.[3] He became a key labour organizer amongst the Kidderpore dock workers and at Saxby and Farmers.[3] Ghosh was jailed in 1948, and remained in prison until 1952.[3] After being freed from jail, Ghosh took up a job at the CPI daily Swadhinata.[3]
Ghosh was named Minister for Labour in the second United Front government of West Bengal, formed in 1969.[6] As Labour Minister, Ghosh sought to support labour in its confrontation with corporate interests.[7] With the CPI(M) in charge of both the Home and Labour departments, the police were instructed not to intervene against striking workers.[8]Gheraos were effectively legalized.[8] Salaries of workers increased as a result.[8] In the first six months of the second United Front government there were 551 strikes and 73 lock-outs across the state, affecting some 570,000 workers.[9]
Ghosh was again named Labour Minister in the Left Front government formed in 1977.[13] His role in the Left Front government differed from that of the United Front experience, rather than unilaterally supporting labour he now sought to act as mediator between unions and employers.[14]