The warning came as parliament insisted on pushing ahead two new bills, despite them being rejected by the Shura Council.
MPs insisted on their decision to approve dropping administrative fees and interest from housing loans taken from the Housing Bank, which the Shura Council rejected, saying it would put the Eskan Bank in financial trouble.
They also insisted on their decision to allow disabled workers to retire after 15 years of work rather than 25, but with their full pensions.
The Shura Council amended this to stipulate that only those proven by a medical commission of being unable to continue work, but MPs voted yesterday to push ahead with their own version.
This means both bills must now go back to the Shura Council for further discussion.
If the council sticks to its guns, the bills will either lie on file or go to a full National Assembly meeting of both chambers.
Dr Al Balooshi asked MPs to sit with her to discuss the pensions bill, before insisting on their decision.
"I have already prepared amendments and we can discuss them with the parliament’s services committees, ensuring that we reach an understanding that everyone agrees with," she said.
"This law is positively discriminatory on the surface, but it will have huge negatives on the 833 disabled we have employed and others we are trying through our offices.
"Businessmen and the government wouldn’t employ them, since they will cost them 10 years of payable non-working period."
But parliament services committee chairman Dr Ali Ahmed said it was too late for the government’s approach.
"I suggest we stick with our decision, which is different from that of Shura," he said.
The Minister of State for Parliament and Shura Council Affairs said that there was a way out, by having those who originally proposed the law from parliament withdraw it.
But MPs backed Dr Ali’s recommendation
MPs were also on their way to a clash with the Shura Council on a third bill, until the parliament chairman intervened.
He said parliament and the council had no major differences and that they agreed on most of the bill regarding the new Medical Licences Regulatory Authority, so there was a chance to negotiate.
"Since parliament this morning has solved a dispute on one article regarding the formation of board members, now I think only one is left," said Mr Al Dhahrani.
"This could be solved easily, rather than have this important law shelved or sent to a joint National Assembly meeting." MPs agreed top postpone a vote for further study.