Sonipat: Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar on Thursday accused the Congress of "misleading" farmers by telling them the Centre's new farm laws will lead to the dismantling of the MSP system and said he would quit politics if that were to happen.
On a whirlwind tour of Baroda assembly constituency, where by-polls will be held on November 3, the chief minister said the minimum support price (MSP) will continue and these laws will only give farmers a greater choice in selling their produce.
Addressing a series of public gatherings in different villages, he also touched upon several steps taken by his government for farmers' welfare.
Khattar said the Congress is "misleading" farmers by telling them that the new laws will "ruin" them, and lead to the dismantling of mandis and MSP system.
"These mandis will continue, MSP will continue. These laws give a greater choice to farmers to sell their produce anywhere," he said.
"MSP is guaranteed in mandis. I announce that if MSP will end, I will quit politics," he said while addressing a gathering in Kathura village.
Khattar was accompanied by wrestler-turned-politician and BJP candidate from Baroda Yogeshwar Dutt, Haryana Minister and Independent MLA Ranjit Singh Chautala, JJP leader Digvijay Singh Chautala and a number of state BJP leaders.
Hitting out at the Congress, Khattar said the opposition party had created a hue and cry when Article 370 was scrapped and claimed that it would lead to a bloodbath in the Kashmir valley.
"Has anything happened in Kashmir in the past year?" he asked.
"The Congress had also made a lot of noise on the Citizenship (Amendment) Act," he said.
The Centre has been saying the recently enacted three farm laws will raise farmers' income, free them from the clutches of the middleman and usher in new technology in farming.
The Opposition and some farmers' organisations have, however, been agitating against the laws alleging that they will destroy the MSP mechanism, end Agricultural Produce Market Committees and allow corporates to arm-twist farmers.
Khattar said only the father-son (former chief minister B S Hooda and his son Deepender Hooda) duo is campaigning for Congress candidate Induraj Narwal in Baroda.
"No other Congress leader is ready to go there," he claimed.