Trump and Vance join March for Life anti-abortion activists in
celebrating the movement's gains
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[January 25, 2025]
By GARY FIELDS, CHRISTINE FERNANDO and ASHRAF KHALIL
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump vowed to support
anti-abortion-rights protesters in his second term as tens of thousands
of demonstrators rallied in Washington on Friday for the annual March
for Life.
“We will again stand proudly for families and for life,” Trump declared
in a prerecorded video address.
Protesters had come to the capital for decades to call for the repeal of
Roe v. Wade, which affirmed a constitutional right to an abortion. Now,
with the repeal of Roe in 2022, they are now on the inside rather than
the outside. With Trump's return to the White House and Republicans in
control of Congress, the activists want to build on their victories.
“Our country faces the return of the most pro-family, most pro-life
American president of our lifetimes," Vice President JD Vance told the
crowd in his in-person speech.
Vance hailed Trump’s previous actions on abortion, saying the president
“delivered on his promise of ending Roe" and appointed hundreds of
anti-abortion judges.
Abortion was largely absent from the stack of dozens of executive
actions in Trump’s first days of office. But he has already made quieter
moves on abortion, including enforcing the Hyde Amendment, which
restricts government funding for most abortions. He also reinstated a
policy that requires foreign nongovernmental agencies to certify that
they don’t provide or promote abortion if they receive U.S. federal
funds for family planning assistance. Since it was introduced over 40
years ago, every GOP president has put it in effect, and every Democrat
has rescinded it.
Trump also pardoned several right to life activists and used wording
related to fetal personhood in an executive order rolling back
protections for transgender people.
Despite frigid weather, a festive atmosphere surrounded the event as
activists showed up with multicolored hats and signs declaring “Life is
our revolution” and “MAGA: Make Abortion Gone Again.”
“This is a significant moment in history,” said Marjorie Dannenfelser,
president of the Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America group. “Yes, we have
a march every year but this one is pretty special...There is a trifecta
of pro-life Republicans in the White House and the House and the
Senate.”
Kristen Cooper, 21, was among several thousand Students for Life America
members attending. She said she was especially excited to be at the
march with anti-abortion Republicans in the White House.
She said this march was her fourth but the first with a Republican
administration. “It’s surreal, actually.”
Anna Henderson, a teacher at a Catholic high school near Jackson,
Michigan, was also attending her fourth march with a busload of her
students.
“Just because we have the backing of the administration doesn’t mean the
fight is over,” she said. “We still need to change people’s hearts.”
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People participating in the annual March for Life, walk from the
Washington Monument to the Supreme Court, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025, in
Washington.(AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
Kristan Hawkins, president of
Students for Life of America, said there is still work to be done,
including calling on Trump to defund Planned Parenthood and offer
resources such as paid family leave to women with unplanned
pregnancies.
“The march now ends on the backside of the U.S. Capitol to remind
our representatives that abortion is not only a state issue, but
also a local issue and also a federal issue,” she said.
Angela Vasquez-Giroux, vice president of communications at Planned
Parenthood Action Fund, which supports abortion rights, said: “We
know exactly what is at risk and we know the hate and lies they will
spew at the March for Life."
The battle over abortion since the 2022 decision, has been in state
courts and at the ballot box where voters in seven states approved
ballot measures for constitutional amendments on reproductive
freedom in November. Legislatures have been fighting back already
with proposals that could make such measures more difficult to get
passed.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis celebrated the 2024 defeat of an abortion
rights amendment on the March for Life stage and boasted about his
role in the state-funded campaign against the measure. Voters there
supported a state constitutional amendment overturning a six-week
abortion ban but Florida requires 60% to pass constitutional
amendments in the state. Most states require a simple majority.
“Most elected officials will say ‘Look, what’s on the ballot is not
their issue — the people can decide,'" DeSantis told the crowd. “And
they wash their hands of it and walk away.”
Supporters of abortion rights spoke up, too.
"No matter what they said on the campaign trail to win an election,
this shows their intentions to continue to attack abortion access,”
Ryan Stitzlein, vice president of political and government relations
for the national abortion rights organization Reproductive Freedom
for All, said of abortion-rights opponents.
“Each time one of these has taken place since the Dobbs decision,
it’s been a day to reflect on how much damage that’s been caused by
that decision and the crisis we continue to live in.”
Ellie Smeal, president and founder of the Feminist Majority
Foundation, said her group would counterprotest.
“We want to remind people of the popularity of abortion rights and
the importance of this issue, that women and men are supportive of
people making their own reproductive health decisions,” she said.
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