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Kakoli Ghosh Dastidar's Political Rebellion and 40 Years of Association with TMC

Tuesday, June 9, 2026
5 min read
Kakoli Ghosh Dastidar's Political Rebellion and 40 Years of Association with TMC

Trinamool Congress is having an intense rebellion right now in Parliament. And leading that noise? Kakoli Ghosh Dastidar . She stepped down from all her party posts days after the party took a big loss in the assembly elections.

She’s a medical doctor, which gives her a certain profile among the prominent faces of the TMC in the Lok Sabha. But what really sticks out is this long political thread. Kakoli has shared an association with Mamata Banerjee stretching over forty years now. That’s a huge chunk of time.

She wasn't just present; she contested elections, remained in opposition, and was generally seen as loyal to the party leadership for a very long time.

Against that background, her move to spearhead a group of twenty TMC MPs demanding separate seating arrangements writing directly to the Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla that felt like a real turning point. It’s significant when you think about how deeply tied she was to Banerjee and the party structure all this time.

Ghosh stayed Mamata Banerjee’s confidant for four decades. Contesting, losing elections, staying in opposition... finally coming into power in 2009. That timeline is heavy.

She has been a media-visible MP for TMC, often stepping up as the party spokesperson many times over. This makes her public rebellion all the more conspicuous. It’s not subtle at all.

When asked about this shift about leaving she gave a response that cut right to the core of things. She said something like, “I was with her when she wasn't in power.” That’s the key line there.

She pushed back against any implication that leaving meant disloyalty just because Banerjee wasn’t ruling West Bengal at that moment. It’s not that simple.

The statement seemed to serve a dual purpose: it defended herself, sure, but also reminded everyone about those four decades of association. The loyalty, she implied, was forged in much tougher times than just political convenience.

She spoke about the situation getting worse. Things were “getting from bad to worse” in Bengal. She pointed to financial messes, the collapse in health services, education, and even the film industry.

There was a policy meant for the poor people of the state... an agenda that should have been pro-people. But she argued that over the last three or four years, the actual work has just become suboptimal.

When pressed about allegations of intimidation and there were certainly claims floating around she struck back hard. “Mera sar katega lekin jhukega nahi.” She added that she had endured enough. Her head might be cut off, but it wouldn’t bow. That's her stance.

She emphasized the sheer length of her fight. Forty years. The words thrown at her by certain people they simply have no effect on her anymore. It was a defiant note. A real assertion of self amidst all that political noise.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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