Ganesh was born in Nigeria. He attended
Stanley Technical School for Boys, a
voluntary aided school in
South London. He studied politics at the
University of Warwick, where he was president of the
Politics Society, and then public policy at
University College London. Ganesh was active in
Labour Students, the student wing of the
Labour Party, having been inspired to join when he was 17 by
Tony Blair's 1999 annual Labour Party Conference speech. In a 2001 interview with
The Guardian, Ganesh described himself as "essentially a
Portillista", indicating views the newspaper described as "liberal on social affairs, centre-right on economics". Ganesh opted not to attend his local constituency Labour Party meetings as they were "too dominated by
Trots". ==Career==