Government Response On 20 September 2020, Prime Minister Narendra Modi referred to the bills as a
watershed moment in the history of Indian agriculture and stated the bills will "ensure a complete transformation of the agriculture sector" and empower tens of millions of farmers. In the Prime Minister's
Mann ki Baat radio address on 29 November 2020, he said that "all political parties had been making promises to the farmers but now these promises had been fulfilled." Several
Union Ministers urged farmers not to have misconceptions about the reforms. Rejecting demands for the inclusion of
Minimum Support Price (MSP) as a mandatory provision in the Farm Bills,
Narendra Singh Tomar, the
Minister of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare said that, while the government was committed to MSP, it was "not a part of the law" earlier and "is not" today. Modi announced on 19 November 2021 that his government will repeal the three bills once the new session of Parliament started later that month. "I urge the protesting farmers to return home to their families, and let's start afresh." Modi stated in a televised address.
Independent Analysts Support Gita Gopinath, the Chief Economist of
International Monetary Fund, said the "farm bills and labour bills are very important steps in the right direction". She also stressed that the implementation of these laws must be right. Sociologist
Salvatore Babones supported the farm laws and said that the reforms would transform Indian agriculture from a "locally managed rural economy into a modern national industry" In January 2021, 866 academics from several educational institutes signed an open letter, expressing their support for the three farm laws. The signatories were from "
DU,
JNU,
Gorakhpur University,
Rajasthan University,
Gujarat University and others". In February 2021, the
US State Department expressed support for the laws stating that they would improve market efficiency and private investment, while encouraging dialogue between the government and those who oppose the laws.
Opposition Kaushik Basu, former chief economist of the
World Bank called the new farm bills are "flawed" and "detrimental to farmers". In February 2021, 413 academics from across India and several foreign universities said in a statement that the new farm bills pose a major threat to Indian farming communities and urged the government to abandon it. The signatories to the statement were from
Jawaharlal Nehru University,
IIT Kanpur,
IIT Madras,
IISc Bangalore,
Indian Statistical Institute Kolkata,
Delhi University,
Panjab University,
IIT Bombay,
IIM Calcutta,
London Film School,
University of Johannesburg,
University of Oslo,
University of Massachusetts,
University of Pittsburgh and others.
Response from Farmers and Opposition Parties Support The Shetkari Sanghatana, a farmers union in
Maharashtra, supported the bills and wanted the market to decide the prices of agricultural commodities. It argued that the minimum support prices have actually weakened farmers, instead of empowering them. According to a Supreme Court appointed committee, 85.7 per cent of the farmer organisations representing around 3.3-crore farmers supported the laws.
Opposition On 31 December 2020, the
Kerala legislative assembly passed a resolution against the farm reforms seeking their withdrawal. It was the fifth state to do so after Punjab, Chhattisgarh and Rajasthan and Delhi. The West Bengal assembly became the sixth state on 28 January 2021. The Punjab assembly passed another resolution against the central farm laws in the beginning of March 2021. Various opposition parties alleged that the bills were passed "unconstitutionally" in "complete disregard" of parliamentary norms and are anti-farmer and corporate-friendly. The
Bharatiya Kisan Sangh (BKS), a farmers organization that is associated with the
BJP itself, has demanded that the government send the bills to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Agriculture and questioned the government's haste to get the bills passed. The acts have faced protests from farmers in various parts of India alleging that it will hurt their earnings. The main reasons for opposition is the uncertainty regarding the implementation of the reforms, controversy surrounding the
minimum support prices (MSPs) and low bargaining power of the farmers are some of the fears that have led to the opposition to the bills. Lack of statutory support in the bills for the MSP is a major point of concern, especially for farmers from
Punjab and
Haryana, where 65% of wheat (2019) is procured at MSP by the
Food Corporation of India and state agencies. The protesters pointed out that the deregulation of the sugar industry in 1998, which paved the way for private establishments, did not result in a significant improvement in farmers' productivity or incomes. A state-led attempt in
Bihar to deregulate the APMCs in 2006 has not resulted in an increase in farmers' income or improved infrastructure. Since the proposal of these laws, different protests have been held in different states of India. These protests are the first large-scale farmer protests since the
Narendra Modi government came into power in 2014. On 26 November 2020, farmers from Haryana were stopped from entering Delhi by Haryana police. At the border near
Ambala, protesters were struck with water cannons and tear gas shells by the police forces; protestors threw stones and tossed police barricades into the river. In response, the police used water cannons. Media have reported that trenches were dug by the police on certain routes into Delhi; the Haryana government dug the National Highway connecting Haryana and Delhi. Sand-filled trucks and bulldozers were also placed on the path of the march to Delhi. Earlier, the house of
Haryana's Chief Minister was blocked by farmers. Farmer leader and
Bharatiya Kisan Union chief
Rakesh Tikait were the biggest faces of the ongoing movement against agricultural laws. An attempt was made to take administrative action on the farmers agitating under the leadership of Rakesh Tikait on the Ghazipur border of Delhi, but Rakesh Tikait did not budge with his intentions and during this time pictures and videos of 'tears' in his eyes appeared in the media. And it gave a new 'edge' to this movement of farmers. == Repeal ==