Chandigarh:Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh and SAD president Sukhbir Singh Badal once again on Saturday attacked each other over the Centre’s farm laws.
While the Punjab CM said the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) chief has "lost political narrative" over the issue, Badal alleged that the state bills passed against the farm laws aimed at “sabotaging” the farmers’ stir.
According to a statement, the CM said the SAD chief seemed to have been jolted into desperation by the entire farm laws saga, which had completely exposed the “double standards” of the Akalis.
Reacting to Badal’s statement, who accused the CM of colluding with the Centre to get the rail blockade by farmers lifted, Amarinder Singh said “strange and senseless” remarks showed the Akali leader had completely “lost” the political narrative, causing him to fumble for words and desperate to find a way out.
On the SAD chief’s suggestion that the state government should have taken the SAD's advice before bringing the bills against the farm laws in the assembly, the CM said, “It seems the NDA government at the Centre has taken the advice of their then allies, the Akalis, in the matter of the anti-farmer, anti-federal and anti-Constitutional farm laws.”
That would explain why they messed it up so badly and took the unilateral decision to impose laws that are clearly designed to ruin farmers, he added.
Terming the SAD president''s allegation of collusion between him and the BJP as "ludicrous", the CM said Badal appears to be in a state of “mental despair and denial”, which is leading him to make such nonsensical remarks.
“Does Sukhbir really believe that I would lead my party to a political suicide with such an act,” asked the CM.
The only rational explanation for such “preposterous” comments would be that the SAD leader had “lost all sense of proportion out of sheer desperation” at his and his party's political “oblivion”, which was no longer a distant possibility but a concrete fact, he added.