(Fox and Friends) — March for Life President Jeanne Mancini and President-elect Jennie Bradley Lichter join ‘Fox & Friends’ ahead of the pro-life march in Washington, D.C.
March for Life
Vance tells March for Life it’s a ‘blessing to fight for the unborn’ during first week in office
(FOX NEWS) — Vice President JD Vance said Friday it is “a joy and a blessing to fight for the unborn” as he addressed pro-life activists at the annual March for Life rally in Washington, D.C.
“We march to live out the sacred truth that every single child is a miracle and a gift from God,” Vance told the crowd at the National Mall in his first public appearance since being sworn in as vice president earlier this week.
Vance praised the marchers who braved bitter cold temperatures to be there, noting that Monday’s inauguration had to be moved inside because of the weather.
“But you guys — and it’s bitter cold today — here you are outside in an especially frigid January, and I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a joyful crowd out here, particularly during this time of year,” he said. “The excitement, the passion, the unwavering conviction that every single person here on the National Mall clearly feels, it is deeply moving to me and means more to President Trump and I than I could possibly say.”
He added that it has been the “single greatest blessing” of his and wife Usha’s lives to watch their three young children “grow, learn and become who they are today.
“Every parent here knows that feeling, that awe of a newborn child. It is our responsibility to cherish and to protect it,” he added.
Vance also talked about bringing a focus on family back to the center of American life, saying the “benchmark of national success” is “whether people feel that they can raise thriving and healthy families in our country.”
The vice president vowed that the federal government will not “direct FBI raids” on homes of pro-lifers, mentioning Mark Houck, a pro-life activist whose home was raided.
Vance also said the era of putting pro-lifers in jail was over, mentioning President Trump’s decision to pardon multiple activists.
“I want more babies in the United States of America. I want more happy children in our country, and I want beautiful young men and women who are eager to welcome them into the world and eager to raise them,” Vance said.
However, he admitted young couples face challenges when having kids, and he called on the government to take action to make it “easier to raise a family.”
Prior to Vance’s speech, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., told the crowd, “House and Senate Republicans are committed to protecting innocent life.”
“For two decades before I was elected to Congress, I served as a constitutional law attorney, and I litigated cases to defend our fundamental freedoms like religious liberty and the sanctity of human life. And now, in this role that I have as speaker of the House, I’m working to defend those freedoms in a different way,” Johnson said.
“And the good news is, there are many leaders here in Congress, just like the ones standing behind us here, who are committed to doing that same thing.
“This new White House has already shown its resolve,” Johnson added. “As one of his first official acts, President Trump just freed and pardoned nearly two dozen wrongfully imprisoned pro-life activists.”
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis urged attendees at the event to push their elected officials to “show courage in defense of the unborn.
“That’s what we need from the people that we elect to the office. The sanctity of life does not depend on poll results. It doesn’t depend on which way the wind is blowing,” DeSantis said.
“It’s an enduring truth, and it represents the foundation of our society, which in our original founding document, which we will celebrate next year, the Declaration of Independence, declared that we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, and we are endowed by our creator with certain unalienable rights, beginning with the right to life itself.”
Also appearing at the event were senators John Thune of South Dakota, James Lankford of Oklahoma, Katie Britt of Alabama, Joni Ernst of Iowa, Cindy Hyde-Smith of Mississippi, Pete Ricketts of Nebraska, and representatives Andy Biggs of Arizona, Julie Fedorchak of North Dakota, Andy Harris of Maryland, Bob Latta of Ohio, John McGuire of Virginia, Bob Onder of Missouri, Chris Smith of New Jersey and Derrick Van Orden of Wisconsin, all Republicans.
How the Pro-Life Generation Is Redefining ‘Unthinkable’
(NATIONAL CATHOLIC REGISTER) — From college campuses to the March for Life, young people (and young families) are giving new life to the pro-life cause.
I’ve gone to many Marches for Life since my first in 1975. Two things that have struck me positively: it’s more ecumenical and it’s growing younger.
That it’s growing younger is not just a reverse mirror of me getting older. There are more young people there. Nor is it “compulsory attendance on a field trip” from Catholic schools. Those young people are from colleges and universities: fresh voters. They’re also not just from the old Catholic colleges and universities that are March for Life standbys — schools like Franciscan University, Belmont Abbey and Christendom. A few years back I remember getting attached to a large group from Louisiana State University. A state university!
Georgetown hosts a student pro-life conference every year on the day after the March. I’ve attended it for the last few years, and it’s refreshing to see so many young collegians and grad students, serious about their subjects and serious about the issues, attending serious presentations about protecting and defending life.
Somebody today posted a picture online of JD Vance holding the young peoples’ trademark sign: “I am the pro-life generation.” I don’t know if the picture was real or a photoshop, but I do know that picture is worth a thousand words.
That picture will strike terror in the hearts of abortionists because Vance may be the future. Here is a 40-year-old man who, at his inauguration, had fidgety little kids in tow. Kids. Plural. Acting like kids. Americans don’t see that much. Marriage scholar and researcher Brad Wilcox has documented that the number of Americans living with a minor in their household and the amount of time they live together have both declined. That’s troublesome.
But Vance is not a lecture. He is a living person showing that it is neither “weird” nor even just a “choice” to have children. He reminds us of what Americans once took for granted: that normal human development generally meant there was a stage in adult life when one moved out of a parent’s basement, got married and had kids. Or, as a more authoritative source put it, “A man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh” (Matthew 19:5).
That terrifies the abortionists. That terrifies the septuagenarians and octogenarians like Joe Biden, Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer, Hillary and Bill Clinton, Jerry Nadler and others who are still living in and fighting for the 1960s and Woodstock. It frightens them because it sends perhaps the visceral awareness that they are the past — and they are passé.
It doesn’t mean they’ll go gently into that good night (where they want to send everybody else). Diogenes needs to prowl the north wing of the Capitol because the fact that 60 Senators would not vote “yes” to pass a law on Jan. 22 banning medical abandonment and infanticide of post-abortion newborns is a national disgrace. The bill failed 52-47, because it needed a three-fifths (60) vote.
A few years ago, Jeanne Mancini told the March for Life that it was not just enough to make abortion illegal. We had to make it “unthinkable.” And I’ve been thinking about that.
“Unthinkable” is a big reach. It’s daunting, even intimidating. It demands cultural shifts and cultures don’t just change.
But we have to think about making abortion “unthinkable.” In the 1800s, it was “unthinkable” that slavery would disappear or that the South could survive without chattel servitude. The “unthinkable” happened: nobody today would entertain the idea slavery might have pros as well as cons.
Eighty years ago, America resolved that Nazism would be “unthinkable” and that postwar Germany had to be rehabilitated first by intellectual fumigation. No normal person today suggests we consider Nazism’s “good” side.
I’d argue the mistake we made after 1989 was in refusing the intellectual work of stigmatizing socialism and communism. Those systems killed on a magnitude that made Hitler look like an amateur. But we pretended that “history was over” and didn’t need to lustrate the post-communist world, which is why an ex-KGB colonel calls himself a democratically-elected president, the world’s most populous country remains under communist dictatorship, and some people still have heart flutters for Havana and Hanoi.
Yes, we can make abortion “unthinkable” and the people who are going to do that are “the pro-life generation.” Some will do it through their research, their scholarship, and their political activism. But many will do it by doing what our vice president showed by example: by marrying, by having babies, and by being (and looking) happy about it.
March for Life rally unfolding in Washington, with Vance to make first public appearance since inauguration
(FOX NEWS) — Thousands of pro-life activists are expected to descend on Washington, D.C., on Friday for the annual March for Life, with organizers saying they look forward to working with President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance to “dismantle the Biden Administration’s aggressive and unpopular abortion agenda.”
Vance is scheduled to speak at the event in what will be his first public appearance since being sworn into office earlier this week. It begins at noon local time with a rally on the Washington Monument grounds.
“We are thrilled that Vice President Vance has chosen the National March for Life for his first public appearance in his new role — a sign of his commitment to standing up for life,” March for Life President Jeanne Mancini and March for Life President-elect Jennie Bradley Lichter said in a joint statement.
“President Trump governed as a pro-life president during his first term which resulted in a long list of accomplishments. We look forward to working with him and Vice President Vance as they dismantle the Biden Administration’s aggressive and unpopular abortion agenda and once again put wins on the board for vulnerable unborn children and their mothers,” they added.
House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., U.S. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and American surfer Bethany Hamilton also are scheduled to speak at the event.
At a pre-rally concert before the march Friday, attendees were seen holding signs saying “I am the pro-life generation” and “Defund Planned Parenthood.”
Trump – who will be visiting North Carolina on Friday to survey damage from September’s Hurricane Helene – became the first sitting president to address the March for Life rally in 2020. He is expected to address today’s event through video.
“I’m going to be watching it and JD Vance our Vice President is there and he is going to be representing us very well,” Trump told reporters Friday morning while departing Washington.
“Even with the wonderful blessing of Roe v. Wade being overturned, which allows more freedom at the state level to enact pro-life laws, the necessary work to build a culture of life in the United States of America is not finished,” the March for Life’s organizers say.
“The goal of the national March for Life is to not only change laws at the state and federal level, but to change the culture to ultimately make abortion unthinkable,” they add.
The organizers are expecting around 150,000 attendees at this year’s event.
The march is unfolding just hours after Trump pardoned pro-life activists convicted of blockading abortion clinic entrances.
“As you know I just signed a pardon and in the pardon we released 23 people that were unjustly put in, having to do with pro-life,” Trump said Friday. “They will be released and they will be out very shortly. It was disgraceful what happened to them.”
Rubio at State Department is ‘massive gain,’ March for Life president says
(WASHINGTON EXAMINER) — EXCLUSIVE — Jeanne Mancini, outgoing president of March for Life, told the the Washington Examiner that she is “just delighted” that former Sen. Marco Rubio was confirmed as secretary of state, even though it meant Congress lost a top anti-abortion legislator, saying that his leadership in foreign affairs will be a boon for the movement.
Mancini has been at the helm of the March for Life organization since the fall of 2012, but she is stepping down at the end of January following her last march as president on Friday. In her exclusive farewell interview with the Washington Examiner, Mancini said that she is happy about Rubio’s speedy confirmation.
“I think that’s a massive gain that he’s in that role,” Mancini said. “It’s a position of tremendous power. I mean, probably the most powerful position after the president in the administration.”
Rubio boasted a strong anti-abortion record during his tenure in the Senate, supporting a variety of abortion-specific policy reforms as well as pro-family policies, such as expanding the child tax credit.
As secretary of state, Rubio would have control over the U.S. Agency for International Development, or USAID, which has a significant hand in promoting family planning and reproductive health programs abroad.
In 2017, the Trump administration established a policy known as Protecting Life in Global Health Assistance, or PLGHA, following the presidential directive that no U.S. taxpayer funding should support foreign organizations that perform or actively promote abortion as a family planning method.
Although this policy was originally established by former President Ronald Reagan and then readopted by former President George W. Bush, then called the Mexico City policy, the policy under the Trump administration expanded the directive to include not just nongovernmental organizations that received U.S. funding for family planning but all NGOs that received any U.S. health assistance.
Mancini said Rubio at the State Department would be in charge of implementing the PLGHA, describing it as “a massive job.”
“I think he’ll have greater influence as secretary of state than a senator,” Mancini said. “And so I’m sad that the Senate lost him, but I think it’s just incredible that he’ll be serving in that capacity. I can’t wait to see what he does.”
Mancini said the March for Life has grown significantly during her tenure, expanding its state-based marches throughout the year following the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision in 2022 that found that there was no federal right to abortion.
Under Mancini, the March’s influence abroad also expanded, gaining an international platform when Trump made an in-person appearance at the event in January 2017.
“President Trump was the first president in American history to come to March for Life, and the first president to ever send a standing vice president to the March for Life,” said Mancini. “We weren’t on the world stage to the same extent until Trump and Vice President Pence made March for Life a matter of importance.”
Trump is expected to address the March via videocast on Friday but will not be present at the event. Vice President JD Vance will be attending in person.
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