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Excise) to the Government of Bombay from 1937 to 1939.
Later, as Labour Minister of the Bombay Government (1946-50),
he successfully piloted the Labour Disputes Bill in
the State Assembly. He served as Trustee, Kasturba Memorial
Trust; Secretary, Hindustan Mazdoor Sevak Sangh; and
Chairman, Bombay Housing Board. He was also a Member
of the National Planning Committee. He was largely instrumental
in organising the Indian National Trade Union Congress
and later became its President.
In 1947, he went to Geneva as a Government delegate
to the International Labour Conference. He worked on
the 'The Freedom of Association Committee' appointed
by the Conference and visited Sweden, France, Switzerland,
Belgium and England to study labour and housing conditions
in those countries.
In March 1950, he joined the Planning Commission as
its Vice-Chairman. In September the following year,
he was appointed Planning Minister in the Union Government.
In addition, he was also given charge of the portfolios
of Irrigation and Power. He was elected to the House
of the People from Bombay in the general elections of
1952 and was re-appointed Minister for Planning Irrigation
and Power. He led the Indian Delegation to the Plan
Consultative Committee held at Singapore in 1955, and
the International Labour Conference held at Geneva in
1959.
Shri Nanda was elected to the Lok Sabha in the 1957
general elections, and was appointed Union Minister
for Labour and Employment and Planning and, later, as
Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission. He visited
the Federal Republic of Germany Yugoslavia and Austria
in 1959.
He was re-elected to the Lok Sabha in the 1962 general
elections from Sabarkantha Constituency in Gujarat.
He initiated the Congress Forum for Socialist Action
in 1962. He was Union Minister for Labour and Employment
in 1962 and 1963 and Minister for Home Affairs from
1963 to 1966.
Following the death of Pt. Nehru, he was a sworn in
as Prime Minister of India on May 27, 1964. Again on
January 11, 1966, he was sworn in as Prime Minister
following the death of Shri Lal Bahadur Shastri at Tashkent.
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