Activists give their verdicts on the fate of abortion rights in America with conservatives in majority control.
Anti-abortion advocates are looking to one goal to combat abortion-rights amendments at the state level in the 2026 elections: recruit high-profile Republican officeholders who are willing to spend political capital and risk their own reputations,
President-elect Donald Trump nominated Kennedy to lead the Department of Health and Human Services on Thursday.
While reproductive rights groups say they want to fight for everyone's bodily autonomy, trans activists say some 'allies' won't even acknowledge their existence — and with Project 2025 looming, the stakes have never been higher.
Mike Pence said choosing Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a departure from what he framed as the Trump-Pence administration's general opposition to abortion access.
Abortion-related ballot initiatives were voted on in 10 states during the election. Here is a state-by-state breakdown of where abortion currently stands in each state.
Trump's HHS pick could reshape public health agencies and usher in a new era for vaccines, food, and medicines.
Former Vice President Mike Pence said Kennedy "should be deeply concerning to millions of pro-life Americans."
Former Vice President Mike Pence is urging GOP senators to reject President-elect Trump’s nomination of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) because of his views on abortion.
Donald Trump has tapped North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum to lead the Interior Department, and Newsweek has looked at his record on abortion and trans issues.
This belief shaped the party’s 2024 strategy. Abortion was “by far the most prevalent topic in 2024 Democratic messaging,” Politico reported, “beating out health care, the economy and immigration.” The Harris campaign’s final round of advertisements mentioned abortion more than any other subject, according to the Wesleyan Media Project.
Voters across seven states approved ballot measures to safeguard abortion rights through their state constitutions, a result that could soon bolster reproductive health care for more than 2 million American women.