Opposition parties rejected the government offer of a statement by Swaraj, who is accused of helping Lalit Modi in getting the UK travel documents, and a debate "in any format, at any time", saying she must resign first.
Their refusal of government's offer prompted Finance Minister Arun Jaitley to say they were interested in disturbance not debate.
Telecom Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad attacked Congress over its demand that Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh chief ministers Vasundhara Raje and Shivraj Singh Chouhan quit, saying if discussion on state issues is allowed, then Robert Vadra's land deal and CBI's probe against Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Virbhadra Singh could also be discussed.
Jaitley, who is Leader of the Rajya Sabha, said government offered that the issue can be discussed in the House with Swaraj making a statement on it, but the opposition rejected it.
"We get a distinct and clear impression that the opposition wants disturbance for some time. They don't want a discussion. The government is publicly declaring, as we have in the House, that we are ready for a discussion in any format, at any time," he told reporters after Rajya Sabha was adjourned repeatedly over the issue.
On the Congress demand that issues involving Raje and Chouhan be discussed, he said there had not been a single precedent in the history of Parliament when state issues were discussed. "That's the part of federal politics of India."
