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Saturday, March 29, 2025

Anti-Abortion Groups Aim to End Federal Planned Parenthood Funding

 Major anti-abortion groups gathered in the nation's capital on Thursday to begin a lobbying effort with Congress and President Donald Trump's administration aimed at eliminating funding for Planned Parenthood

opens in a new tab or window, with some calling on Elon Musk to make the organization one of his cost-cutting targets.

The anti-abortion groups are taking aim at abortion providers under an initiative called Defund Planned Parenthood, which targets federal Medicaid funding for the reproductive healthcare provider. More than 150 of the groups signed a letter Wednesday urging Congress to cut Medicaid funding for Planned Parenthood and other healthcare centers that provide abortions through the budget reconciliation process.

"Today is a historic moment where the pro-life movement stands united behind one message: Defund Planned Parenthood," said Kristan Hawkins, president of Students for Life, as she kicked off the rally in view of the U.S. Capitol.

She called on Trump and other Republicans to "defund your political enemies," adding that the abortion lobby has long targeted Republicans.

The federal Hyde Amendmentopens in a new tab or window already restricts government funding for most abortions, and less than 5% of the services Planned Parenthood provides are abortions, according to the organization's 2023 annual report.

Rachel Rebouche, dean of Temple University's Beasley School of Law, said the Defund Planned Parenthood movement has been building for 10 years but has gained momentum as the anti-abortion movement has been emboldened by Trump's presidential victory and by Republicans winning control of Congress

opens in a new tab or window in November.

"We're seeing more enthusiasm in states like South Carolina and others to close down Planned Parenthood under the banner of stopping abortions, which their laws already do," she said.

Tina Whittington, executive vice president at Students for Life, said she was confident that Trump would consider cutting Planned Parenthood's Medicaid funding and that Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) could be just the tool for doing it.

"I'm more confident because we're in an era where DOGE's actions are targeting waste, fraud, and abuse," she said. "And this is a great way to do that."

The Supreme Court announced it will hear a caseopens in a new tab or window involving South Carolina's attempt to strip Medicaid funding for Planned Parenthood. Experts say the lawsuit could prompt similar efforts in conservative states across the country to chip away at the organization's funding.

During a 2015 push to strip Planned Parenthood funding, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that doing so would cost the government $130 million over 10 years.

Meanwhile, lawmakers in at least three states -- Missouri, Ohio, and South Carolina -- have introduced bills this year aiming to create tax breaks for anti-abortion centers.

The strategies come during a time when abortion rights advocates are warning that Trump and his Cabinet hold significant power to restrict access to medication abortionopens in a new tab or window nationwide.

Rather than immediately heeding calls from anti-abortion allies to restrict Medicaid funding for clinics that provide abortions, Trump has made quieter moves.

He reinstated a policy that requires foreign nongovernmental agencies to certify that they don't provide or promote abortion if they receive U.S. aid for family planning. He also pardoned several anti-abortion activistsopens in a new tab or window who had been convicted of blockading abortion clinics and used wording related to fetal personhood in an executive order rolling back protections for transgender people.

The Republican president has appointed abortion opponents to some key Cabinet positions that could affect the availability of medication abortion and contraception, Medicaid coverage for family planning services, collection of abortion-related data, and abortion access for troops and veterans. In a pre-recorded message to the thousands who attended the March for Life in January, Trump said he proudly stood for families and for life.

Alabama Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville said during Thursday's rally that he "truly believes President Trump is the most pro-life president in history."

"Absolutely zero taxpayer dollars should be going to abortion," he said. "... and I know President Trump agrees."

Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of SBA Pro-Life America, said Republican control of the White House and Congress represents a unique opportunity to push for legislation targeting Planned Parenthood.

"I believe this is the moment they will be defunded, and this is the blow that will bring them down," she said.

Advocates on either side of the abortion debate are waiting to see if Trump's Department of Justice will revive the Comstock Actopens in a new tab or window, a 19th-century obscenity law, to restrict the mailing of medication abortion or other materials used for abortions. Attorney General Pam Bondi has a history of defending abortion restrictions, and her confirmation was celebrated by abortion opponents.

https://www.medpagetoday.com/washington-watch/washington-watch/114861

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