President Donald Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance spoke to tens of thousands of pro-life marchers at the 52nd March for Life held Friday at the National Mall, Washington, D.C. Trump, speaking by prerecorded video from the Oval Office,
Reports of the pro-life movement's death have been greatly exaggerated. Vice President J.D. Vance spoke in person at the March for Life last week,
(ABC 6 News) — In Washington D.C., thousands of anti-abortion rights advocates marched at the National Mall. Since Roe v. Wade was overturned, March for Life organizers have shifted their focus to states that have protected abortion rights, including Minnesota.
Other prominent GOP speakers include House Speaker Mike Johnson, Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.
The questions at the 2025 March for Life were familiar ones for D.C. Beltway insiders: Would major politicians show up, and what would they say?
The questions at the 2025 March for Life were familiar ones for D.C. Beltway insiders: Would major politicians show up, and what would they say?
Vice President JD Vance has become the champion of traditional family life that most Americans didn’t know we needed.
The Trump administration made sure that the FACE Act would no longer be weaponized against pro-life viewpoints.
While most speakers — policymakers and pro-life advocates — spoke specifically about making abortion “illegal and unthinkable” in post- Dobbs America, Vance championed a pro-family vision that not only rejected abortion, but also supported raising children.
While Trump expressed his support to the thousands of marchers assembled on the National Mall in a video message Friday, it was left to his vice president, J.D. Vance, to deliver the administration’s new message to the pro-life movement, centering the conversation on supporting families while they raise children.
The Trump administration has directed federal prosecutors to limit enforcement of a federal law safeguarding abortion centers, reproductive health centers and pregnancy resource centers, calling the Biden administration’s previous use of longstanding protection “the prototypical example” of weaponization of the federal government.
Around 4,000 anti-abortion demonstrators marched to the Capitol in Austin Saturday to celebrate the movement’s long-fought victories in the state.