“I did not join politics to determine the price of ‘Aloo and Tamatar’ (potatoes and tomatoes). I joined for the sake of the country’s young man”, said Khan when the opposition parties accused him of wrong in economic security.

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan said on Sunday he did not join the politics to check the price of ‘Aloo, Tamatar’, when he attacked the opposition parties to submit a non-believing movement in him in parliament, accused him of misrepresentation.

Overcoming political rallies in the city of Hafizabad in Punjab Province, Khan said the nation would oppose the elements that tried to bring down their government through “buying conscience [parliamentary members] using money”.

He said Pakistan would be a great country in the remainder of his term, adding that the incentives announced by his government would soon produce results.

Turn-Politician said that 25 years ago, he decided to join politics for the country’s young man, he added that he had no personal advantage because he already had everything in life that someone could dream.

“I did not join the politics to determine the price of ‘Aloo and Tamatar’ (potatoes and tomatoes). I joined for the country’s youth”, Khan, also the Chairman of the Pakistani Tehreek-e-Casa Party in power, said.

“If we want to be a great nation, we must support the truth, and this is what I preach for the past 25 years,” Khan said.

Khan’s speech came a few days after United’s Opposition Front filed a movement of not confidence in him while clamping his hopes for the success of movements to members who were alienated from the ruling party and allies.

The main leaders of the opposition parties will meet on Monday at the residence of opposition leaders in the National Assembly and the Muslim League President-Nawaz (PML-N), Shehbaz Sharif to hold effective hassle to make him a self-confident movement successfully.

Khan also said state responsibility and justice to stop “corrupt” and “convicted” politicians who tried to “drop the country” through horse trading.

He said people would see that those who tried to drive him from the top office would be buried under their own conspiracy weight.

In his speech, Khan criticized the head of Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-FAZL (JUI-F) Maulana Fazlur Rehman, Pakistan-Nawaz Muslim League (PML-N) Supremo Nawaz Sharif and Peoples Party (PPP) Chair of Asif Ali Zardari to maintain silent US drone strikes in Pakistan between 2008 and 2018, said the leaders never spoke for Pakistani rights.

In 342 members of the National Assembly, the opposition needed 272 votes to eliminate the prime minister.

Prime Minister Khan, 69, in power in 2018 and the next general election is scheduled to be held in 2023.

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