"Therefore, some politicians are let off and that is their grievance. But once the government demonstrates action that will follow, then there will be no problem. In the end, the opposition does not gain much by disrupting Parliament," he said.
Shourie, however, said while the Opposition takes a stand, it "finds a reason not to pursue" it after five days, recalling the BJP's boycott of Finance Minister P Chidambaram in the Parliament demanding his resignation over the 2G scam.
"After a few days, everything was forgotten and Chidambaram continued to speak in Parliament and they said nothing," he said.
If the MPs felt 'outraged', they should be Gandhian and not compromise. Otherwise, it seems "its just for the moment."
On Chidambaram being re-assigned the finance ministry, he said, "No doubt, the country is suffering from his budgets, of the deficits which he pioneered, of the populist schemes which he included, of the off-budget items which he did not include in the budget and all of which had inflationary consequences."