Party spokesman Shashi Tharoor told mediapersons in New Delhi that non-passage of the bills will be a "setback to the nation" and so all options will have to be examined to bring them into effect through other routes, including the ordinance route.
However, the Union minister, who was holding his first briefing as party spokesman, insisted that laws are "best made in Parliament" and it can still happen.
"We are extremely keen on seeing these bills are passed. We are running out of time. We are talking to other parties and hope that they agree for an extension of the session", he said.
Party vice president Rahul Gandhi has made a strong pitch for the passage of the anti-graft measures.
Gandhi had accused the Bharatiya Janata Party of not allowing the bills to be passed by disrupting Parliament repeatedly, a charge denied by the opposition party. The anti-graft legislations have been dubbed by BJP as the Congress vice president's "agenda" in an election year.
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So much empty rhetoric