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regular-article-logo Wednesday, 04 March 2026

Rahul Gandhi hits PM Modi over trade deal, says he quietly slipped off to Israel again

Speaking in Bhopal on Tuesday, Rahul Gandhi had said the Indo-US interim trade deal was sealed under pressure and dared Modi to scrap the "anti-farmer" agreement, following the US Supreme Court ruling

PTI Published 25.02.26, 09:56 PM
Rahul Gandhi

Rahul Gandhi File picture

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Wednesday took a swipe at Prime Minister Narendra Modi, saying it has been more than 24 hours since he challenged the PM to scrap the India-US interim trade deal and once again, he (Modi)has "quietly slipped off to Israel".

In a post in Hindi on X, Rahul Gandhi said, "Narendra 'Surrender' Modi, it’s been more than 24 hours since I challenged you to cancel the US Trade Deal -- and once again, you’ve quietly slipped off to Israel." "At least once, you’ve already 'danced and sung' in Israel at Epstein’s behest - so this time, on whose orders will you strike a deal against the country’s interests and return?" the leader of opposition in Lok Sabha said.

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Speaking in Bhopal, Rahul Gandhi on Tuesday had said the Indo-US interim trade deal was sealed under pressure and dared Prime Minister Modi to scrap the "anti-farmer" agreement, following the US Supreme Court ruling.

Addressing the ‘Kisan Mahachaupal’ rally, the former Congress chief had described the agreement as "an arrow in the heart of farmers".

"After the US Supreme Court ruling on the trade deal (global tariffs), I challenge PM Modi to scrap it if he has courage...but he won't be able to do so," Rahul Gandhi had said.

In a major setback to Trump's pivotal economic agenda for his second term, the US Supreme Court, in a 6-3 verdict, ruled that the tariffs imposed by the president on nations around the world were illegal and that he had exceeded his authority when he imposed the sweeping levies.

Rahul Gandhi has alleged that the prime minister approved the agreement under external pressure linked to the threat of releasing "Epstein files" and an ongoing criminal case involving industrialist Gautam Adani in the US.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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