Kharge warns Centre of farm protests against deal with U.S.


Kharge Warns Centre of Farm Protests Against Deal with U.S.

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-II & GS-III | Date: 5 February 2026


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Event
2020 Centre enacts three farm laws: (i) Farmers (Empowerment and Protection) Agreement on Price Assurance and Farm Services Act, (ii) Farmers' Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Act, (iii) Essential Commodities (Amendment) Act. [S4]
2020–21 Year-long farmers' protest, primarily in Punjab/Haryana; agitation centred on fears of corporatisation, erosion of MSP, and weakening of APMC mandis. [S4]
Nov 2021 PM Modi announces withdrawal; Farm Laws Repeal Bill, 2021 passed by voice vote in both Houses on 29 November 2021. [S4]
2024–25 Fresh farmers' protest (2024–25), primarily by Punjab farmers demanding legally guaranteed MSP and debt waiver. [S4]
Jan–Feb 2026 India–U.S. interim trade agreement signed; tariff on Indian exports to U.S. reduced to 18% (from 50% reciprocal); India agrees to open market for select U.S. agri imports including DDGs and sorghum. [S2][S3]
4 Feb 2026 Kharge raises alarm in Parliament; compares deal to farm laws, warns of similar rollback. [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

The India–U.S. Interim Trade Agreement (2026) - Framework Agreement date: 6 February 2026. [S2] - Tariff concession: India's exports to U.S. face reduced tariff of 18% (down from 50% reciprocal tariff). [S3] - Agricultural products kept outside tariff concessions by India: Wheat, rice, maize, sugar, soybean, poultry, and dairy. [S2] - Products gaining zero-duty access to U.S.: Spices, tea, coffee, cashew nuts, chestnuts, avocado, banana, mango, kiwi, papaya. [S2] - U.S. products newly entering Indian market: DDG (Dried Distillers Grains) — processed maize; Sorghum (Jowar) — duty-free imports permitted. [S2] - India's agri trade surplus with U.S.: > $1.3 billion. [S2] - Implementing Ministry (trade): Ministry of Commerce and Industry (Minister: Piyush Goyal). - Agriculture defence: Union Agriculture Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan stated deal "fully safeguards" Indian farm interests. [S3]

The Three Farm Laws (Repealed 2021) - Enabling legislation: three acts enacted in September 2020. [S4] - Repealing legislation: Farm Laws Repeal Bill, 2021 — passed 29 November 2021, introduced by Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar. [S4] - Stated objectives of original laws: contract farming framework, APMC-free trade, deregulation of essential commodities supply. [S4]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Political / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Social


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. The Farm Laws Repeal Bill, 2021 was passed by voice vote in both Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha on 29 November 2021. [S4]
  2. The three farm acts were originally enacted in September 2020. [S4]
  3. PM Modi announced the withdrawal of the three farm laws on 19 November 2021. [S4]
  4. The India–U.S. interim trade agreement (Framework Agreement) was signed on 6 February 2026. [S2]
  5. Under the deal, U.S. tariff on Indian exports was reduced to 18% from a proposed 50% reciprocal tariff. [S3]
  6. DDG (Dried Distillers Grains) — a processed maize product used as animal feed — is among the U.S. agricultural products gaining market access in India under the deal. [S2]
  7. Sorghum (Jowar) from the U.S. also gains duty-free import access to India under the agreement. [S2]
  8. India's agricultural trade surplus with the U.S. exceeds $1.3 billion. [S2]
  9. Indian spices, tea, coffee, cashew nuts, mango, banana, kiwi, papaya gain zero-duty access to the U.S. market under the deal. [S2]
  10. Core food crops — wheat, rice, maize, sugar, soybean, poultry, and dairy — are kept outside tariff concessions by India. [S2]
  11. The debate in Parliament was during the Motion of Thanks on President Droupadi Murmu's Address to the joint session of Parliament (Article 87 of the Constitution). [S1]
  12. Kharge's warning was delivered in his capacity as Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha. [S1]
  13. The Agriculture Ministry portfolio defending the deal is held by Shivraj Singh Chouhan (Union Agriculture Minister). [S3]
  14. Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal maintained the deal would benefit "all sections of society." [S1]
  15. U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins was quoted by Kharge as stating American farmers would benefit — a statement the Opposition used to challenge the government's pro-farmer narrative. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning; India's bilateral relations; Role of Opposition
GS-III Food security; Agriculture — MSP, APMC, agricultural marketing; Effects of liberalisation on agriculture; India's trade policy

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "The India–U.S. interim trade agreement has revived anxieties last seen during the three farm laws episode. Critically examine whether India's agricultural trade architecture is structurally equipped to absorb bilateral liberalisation pressures." (GS-III, 250 words)

  2. "Parliamentary oversight of executive-signed trade agreements remains a structural gap in India's constitutional framework. Discuss with reference to recent controversies." (GS-II, 150 words)

  3. "Compare the political economy of the three farm laws (2020–21) and the India–U.S. trade deal (2026). What does the pattern reveal about the limits of agrarian reform from above in India?" (GS-II/III, 250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Three Farm Laws & Repeal (2020–21) Direct historical parallel cited by Kharge; essential for the protest-rollback dynamic
Minimum Support Price (MSP) — statutory vs. administrative The unresolved demand that links both protest episodes
APMC (Agricultural Produce Market Committee) framework Import competition undermines mandi price discovery
WTO Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) — Green Box, Amber Box, Blue Box India's subsidy commitments and trade disciplines constrain domestic farm protection
India–U.S. bilateral trade relations (broader) Context for the tariff reciprocity framework within which the agri deal sits
Motion of Thanks debate (Article 87) Constitutional mechanism through which the parliamentary challenge was raised
India's trade agreement ratification procedures Absence of mandatory parliamentary approval for trade deals — a governance issue
2024–25 Farmers' Protest (Shambhu border standoff) The most recent agrarian mobilisation; the political base for Kharge's warning

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing the three farm laws with each other: The APMC-bypass law (Farmers' Produce Trade and Commerce Act) is most commonly confused with the contract farming law (Price Assurance Act). Know each act's specific purpose separately.

  2. Repeal date vs. announcement date: PM Modi announced repeal on 19 November 2021; the Repeal Bill was passed by Parliament on 29 November 2021 — two different dates, both testable.

  3. Who said what in the trade deal debate: Kharge (Opposition, Rajya Sabha LoP) warned of protests; Nadda (Leader of House) and Goyal (Commerce Minister) defended; Chouhan (Agriculture Minister) gave sector-specific assurances. Do not mix up roles.

  4. Zero-duty direction matters: Indian exports of spices/fruits get zero duty in the U.S. — not the other way. U.S. agri products (DDGs, sorghum) get market access into India — these are two different directions of the same deal.

  5. Farm Laws Repeal Bill passed by voice vote, not division vote: A common distractor in Prelims MCQs on parliamentary procedure; both Houses passed it within minutes by voice vote — no division was called.


11. Sources