MP Mark Warawa to replace abortion motion with new bill

Conservative MP Mark Warawa is dropping his bid for a vote on his motion to condemn sex-selective abortion, an issue that caused several MPs to split with the rest of the party's caucus in recent weeks.

Warawa told reporters on his way into the House of Commons that he is tabling a bill tomorrow that deals with sex offenders who serve house arrest in the same neighbourhoods as their victims, revictimizing them when they encounter each other in the community.

The House notice paper lists Warawa's intention to table a bill to amend the Corrections and Conditional Release Act provision on restrictions on offenders. Warawa referred to it as the "safe at home" act.

Warawa was twice blocked from having his motion debated and voted on in the House. The motion, M-408, was to condemn sex-selective abortion, but opposition MPs said they feared he was trying to reopen the abortion debate.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has consistently said he doesn't want to reopen the abortion debate, leaving some MPs to argue Warawa had to be prevented from bringing his motion to avoid breaking that promise.

A subcommittee declared the motion non-voteable, and the main committee upheld that decision, leaving Warawa with three options:

To replace the motion with another private member's bill or motion.

To appeal to the House for a secret ballot vote on whether to overturn the decision.

To do nothing, leaving the motion to be debated for an hour, but not voted on.

Warawa said three weeks ago that he had the necessary support to appeal the committee's decision. An appeal would have required the backing of five MPs from at least two recognized parties.