On a sticky wicket

Item

Title

On a sticky wicket

Description

The significance of the farming community as a vote bank is not lost on any political party, least of all the BJP, which has won two Lok Sabha elections in a row by huge margins. Still, the ruling party has been adamantly defending the flawed Bills. On Friday, PM Narendra Modi reiterated that small and marginal farmers, who account for 86 per cent of the population that survives or thrives on agriculture, would benefit the most from the reforms. Ironically, it’s this major chunk that is fearing a wipeout if the new laws come into force.The contentious Bills were first promulgated as ordinances in early June. Voices of dissent were heard sporadically during the three months preceding the start of the monsoon session of Parliament, but the BJP did not pay heed to them. No wonder the party today finds itself under ever-increasing pressure to revoke the ‘anti-farmer’ laws. The PM has said it’s the ‘responsibility and duty’ of all party workers to save farmers from ‘rumours’ and explain to them the importance of the agricultural reforms. Had this exercise been initiated in June itself, the BJP might have eventually succeeded in developing consensus on the matter. Now, nothing less than a climbdown by the government would placate the farmers.

Publisher

The Tribune

Date

2020-09-26