Simon Commission was a group of seven members of Parliaments under the Chairmanship of Sir John Simon. The Commission arrived in British India in February 1928 to study constitutional reform.
The Commission was strongly opposed by Nehru, Gandhi, Jinnah, Patel, Lala Lajpat, the Indian National Congress, and Muslim League because it contained seven members of the British Parliament but no Indian.
Similarly, farmers of India rejected the recent three agriculture acts passed by the parliament because the government did not discuss with farmers before approval.
Farmers, agricultural experts, and many journalists are of the view that these three Acts protect the interest of corporates but are very harmful to farmers.
Farmers want that in a democratic country, these acts should not be imposed on them forcibly. Now our farmers are well educated, intelligent and they know better about the impact of these acts on them.
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