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March for Life

January 24, 2025 By March for Life

March for Life attendees react to JD Vance speech: ‘It was amazing’

(FOX NEWS) — Vice President JD Vance received a massive welcome from pro-lifer activists at the March for Life this Friday in his first public address since the inauguration.

Vance touted President Donald Trump’s recent pardons of several pro-life activists prosecuted by the Biden Department of Justice. He also spoke strongly about the need for pro-family governmental policies, saying, “I want to see more babies in the United States of America.”

Trump also delivered remarks to the March for Life crowd via a video message.

Marchers told Fox News Digital that Vance’s presence showed that the new Trump administration stands in solidarity with the pro-life movement and gives them optimism for the future.

“It was amazing,” said Amy Lewis, a pro-lifer who came with a group from Dry Fork Christian School in Virginia. “It was amazing that he was here. We were able to see him and to see that our new administration supports life as much as we do. It just really kind of drives it home that we have an administration that’s here to support us and to support our beliefs.”

Sarah Morales Wade, an activist who came with a pro-life youth group from Houston called the Catholic Organization of Life, told Fox News Digital: “It’s so inspiring to see someone so high up in office fighting with us, with the kids and, and that we have people who are supporting us and who will fight for life with us.”

Elizabeth O’Brien, another member of the Houston group, told Fox News Digital that she thought Vance’s speech was “amazing.”

“When the vice president comes out, and he’s telling us how precious life is, that’s an eye-opener,” she said. “It gives us reassurance that the Trump administration is with us.”

Isaac Desrosiers, a student at Franciscan University, a Catholic college in Steubenville, Ohio, Vance’s home state, told Fox News Digital that for him, the vice president’s speech showed that “he’s not just a politician telling tales, trying to get votes.”

“He’s truly Catholic, he holds Catholic values, and he brings that compassion and that sincere Catholic belief and faith to the table,” he said. “He’s genuinely concerned about what is going on in the world, what’s going on in our country. And he generally wants freedom and equality for babies so that they may have the chance to come into this world and to live an amazing life.”

Desrosiers said that though he’s “not sure what to expect” from the Trump administration regarding the abortion issue, he is “optimistic.”

“I’m hoping it means that this country’s going to be more pro-life and he’s going to pass more pro-life laws,” he said.


(Originally published by Fox News)

Filed Under: In the News

January 24, 2025 By March for Life

March for Life speakers praise God’s gift of life, stand firm for the unborn

(CATHOLIC NEWS AGENCY) — A diverse group of speakers including activists, politicians, and individuals sharing personal stories fired up the crowd on the rally stage ahead of the 52nd annual National March for Life in Washington, D.C., on Friday.

The theme of this year’s demonstration, “Life: Why We March,” was highlighted as speakers, many of whom are Catholics, explained the reasons for their pro-life convictions.

Outgoing March for Life President Jeanne Mancini, who has led the organization since 2012, introduced the new March for Life president, Jennie Bradley Lichter. Lichter — a Catholic mother of three, a lawyer, and a longtime advocate for the sanctity of life — has been active in the pro-life movement since her childhood.

“You know that the wantedness of a human being doesn’t determine our value. You know that it is right and good to stand up for people who are too small to defend themselves … but lately many of the loudest voices have been shouting the lie that women need access to abortion,” Lichter said.

“I will see you all back here next year and every year until every woman and every baby is loved and protected,” she added.

Archbishop Joseph Naumann of the Archdiocese of Kansas City, Kansas, led the crowds in prayer, praying that the pro-lifers in attendance go out in strength to build the culture of life and asking the Lord to bless them with “the fire of your Holy Spirit” so that they “never tire of the crusade for life whose origin is in you.”

Following remarks from Sen. John Thune of North Dakota, Speaker of the House Mike Johnson described himself as a “product of an unplanned teen pregnancy,” the first of his parents’ four children, and gave thanks for the fact that his parents chose life.

Johnson went on to highlight Congress’ work defending fundamental freedoms and the new administration’s pro-life actions, including Trump’s pardoning of pro-life activists and his defining life as beginning at conception.

“America is premised on the self-evident truth that every single person is made in the image of our creator God, and thus every single person has inestimable dignity and value,” Johnson said.

Speaking next, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis encouraged all present to “show courage in defense of the unborn” and recounted how his state defeated a pro-abortion ballot measure in November despite misleading information from the opposition and an estimated $120 million spent by the pro-abortion side.

With the ballot measure’s defeat Nov. 5, 2024, Florida became the first state to rebuff a pro-abortion ballot initiative since the overturning of Roe v. Wade along with Nebraska and South Dakota on the same night.

DeSantis argued that standing for the right to life is not bad politics and that he himself is proof of it, pointing to his victory in Florida after overturning Roe v. Wade. DeSantis, who is Catholic, signed legislation in April 2023 to prohibit abortion in Florida once the unborn child’s heartbeat can be detected, which occurs at about six weeks into pregnancy.


(Originally published by Catholic News Agency)

Filed Under: In the News

January 24, 2025 By March for Life

Trump and Vance join March for Life anti-abortion activists in celebrating the movement’s gains

(AP NEWS) — 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.”

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.


(Originally published by AP News)

Filed Under: In the News

January 24, 2025 By March for Life

Vance Promises Pro-Life Movement ‘We Stand With You’ In First Vice Presidential Remarks

(DAILY WIRE) — “It is a blessing to know the truth, and the truth is that unborn life is worthy of protection.”

WASHINGTON — JD Vance delivered his first public remarks as vice president at the 52nd annual March for Life on Friday, vowing to the pro-life movement that the Trump-Vance administration stands by them, and will continue to march with them through the years.

“It is a blessing to know the truth, and the truth is that unborn life is worthy of protection,” he told the thousands of pro-life demonstrators gathered on the National Mall on Friday morning, promising to be back next year. “So please, go forth, not with frustration, but with joy. We are joyful to March for Life. We are joyful to know that that picture on an ultrasound, that is a picture of a baby with hopes and dreams and potential to come. It is a joy and a blessing to fight for the unborn, to work for the unborn, and to March for Life.”

“I want to be clear that this administration stands by you,” he promised the crowd. “We stand with you, and most importantly, we stand with the most vulnerable and the basic principle that people exercising the right to protest on behalf of the most vulnerable should never have the government go after them ever again.”

It was an emotional moment for many of the pro-lifers in the crowd — families pushing strollers and wiping their children’s faces clean, teenagers traveling with their high school teachers, priests and nuns in cheerful groups, and college students from all across the country, joking, flirting, and cheering together. This is a crowd that largely voted for Donald Trump, but many of them are single issue voters, and some were anxious when they went to the ballot box this year. Roe’s overturn had made abortion politically toxic, and they were unsure what their footing was with the former president.

Yet they trusted that if elected, Trump would once again head a pro-life administration, and they remembered that he was the most pro-life president the United States had ever seen — the man who appointed the justices who overturned Roe v. Wade.

And many of those present at the March for Life on Friday told The Daily Wire that his actions in this first week of his presidency alone have reassured them that the Trump-Vance administration will defend life throughout the next four years.

On Thursday, Trump pardoned 23 pro-life activists targeted by President Joe Biden’s administration for their pro-life advocacy. On Friday evening, shortly after the March for Life had ended, Trump signed an executive order aboard Air Force One banning international non-governmental organizations that promote abortions from receiving federal funding. His action reinstates the Mexico City Policy — a serious priority for many pro-lifers.

And the president himself sent a video message to the march, as he traveled to view the damage that flooding and wildfires had done to North Carolina and California.

“In my second term, we will again stand proudly for families and for life,” Trump promised the crowd, praising the “tireless work and devotion” of the pro-life movement for helping to defeat Roe v. Wade, struck down by the Supreme Court in June 2022. He slammed Democratic extremism on abortion, pointing out that many Democrat-led states and lawmakers embrace abortion up until birth — and even allowing babies to die if they are born alive in botched abortions.

That message concluded: “To all of the very special people marching today in this bitter cold, I know your hearts are warm and your spirits are strong, because your mission is just very, very pure, to forge a society that welcomes and protects every child as a beautiful gift from the hand of our creator. Thank you for never losing hope and never giving up. Thank you for your tremendous support, God bless you, and God bless America.”

Vance emphasized his support and belief in the movement as well.

“You guys are the beating heart of the pro-life movement, and you have saved many lives already, and you’re going to save more again,” Vance told the pro-life movement on Friday. “You being here, this very march is a reminder of the incredible strength and unity of the pro-life movement and from the bottom of my heart, thank you, thank you for being here, and thank you for marching here today.”

“Most importantly, in your works, you remind us that the March for Life is not just a single event that happens on a frigid January day,” he said. “The March for Life is the work of the pro-life movement every single day from this point forward.”

 


(Originally published in Daily Wire)

Filed Under: In the News

January 24, 2025 By March for Life

Trump, Vance speak at antiabortion March for Life rally in D.C.

(WASHINGTON POST) — Thousands turned out and sent a message to Trump — a complicated figure for the antiabortion movement.

Nearly three years after the U.S. Supreme Court knocked down federal abortion rights, and only days after the self-described “most pro-life president ever” reentered the White House, thousands of antiabortion demonstrators marched to the U.S. Capitol on Friday for the 52nd March for Life.

But even bolstered by Donald Trump’s reelection and a new ruling GOP trifecta, the annual rite found the antiabortion movement at a crossroads, still working to stake out a new front line in a shifting fight over abortion access.

In a video address played Friday to the frigid, wind-whipped crowd, Trump reiterated his antiabortion record but stopped short of promising to pursue restricting abortion access.

“In my second term we will again stand proud for families and for the rights of the unborn,” shielding them from “radical left attacks on churches and crisis centers,” Trump said. “We will get them to justice one way or another.”

On the eve of the rally, he pardoned 23 people who were convicted of blocking access to reproductive health clinics, fulfilling another campaign promise to reward political supporters who have run afoul of the law. And on Friday, the Justice Department said it would scale back Biden-era efforts to prosecute demonstrators who interfere with patient access to the clinics.

The crowd’s biggest reaction at the march, however, came after Trump’s image faded from the monitor and Vice President JD Vance took the stage. In his first public appearance since taking office, Vance positioned what has long been among the nation’s most divisive social issues as a problem intertwined with economic struggle — a theme that helped power the Republican ticket to dominance last November.

“It is the task of our government to make it easier for young moms and dads to afford to have kids,” Vance said. “It should be easier to raise a family, easier to find a good job, easier to build a home to raise that family in, easier to save up and purchase a good stroller or a crib for a nursery.”

The messaging was echoed by many speakers Friday, including Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-South Dakota) and House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana) — who told the crowd Dobbs did not signal the fight’s end; the battle was to change American culture itself.

“People have asked me if we are done marching in Washington because Roe versus Wade was overturned,” Jennie Bradley Lichter, president-elect of the March for Life Education and Defense Fund, told the crowd at the start of the rally. “No, of course not, we are not done. We will keep marching until abortion is not only illegal but unthinkable. We have so much work left to do.”

Since Dobbs, a handful of states have set their own restrictions, and as of October, one in three women ages 18 to 44 live in a state where abortion is banned or mostly banned. Yet research has found that the number of abortions in the United States increased in 2023 as more people accessed medication-induced abortions to end unwanted pregnancies.

A national exit poll conducted by Edison Research from the 2024 election shows that 65 percent of Americans said abortion should be legal in most cases, while 31 percent said it should be mostly or always illegal. Notably, Trump won 29 percent support among voters who supported abortion rights, along with 91 percent of those who opposed legal abortion, the poll showed.

“Polling has suggested they’re not winning the battle for hearts and minds anymore,” abortion movement historian Mary Ziegler said of antiabortion activists. “In that sense, the movement finds itself at a crossroads.”

Since the fall of Roe, antiabortion groups have sharpened their focus on pressing federal lawmakers to defund Planned Parenthood and launched legal efforts to restrict access to mifepristone, a widely used abortion medication. March for Life has marches planned in 17 states in 2025, according to its website.

States have staked out vastly different positions, with the most conservative banning all or most abortions. This month, Maryland enshrined the right to abortion access in the state’s constitution.

Bob Craig, 65, a deacon who traveled to the march with a group of Massachusetts parishes, said this year marked at least his 10th March for Life. He said the sense of unity kept him coming back. Today, Craig said he was particularly interested to hear from Vance.

“Politics aside, it’s comforting to know we have that kind of voice in the vice president’s office advocating for us,” Craig said, agreeing with Trump’s assessment that abortion is an issue best left to the states. He said he thought a federal abortion ban would go against the Constitution.

“I believe that people get to make their own decisions in terms of state government, but now this shifts the responsibility to make good choices at a state level in their legislation against abortion.”

Organizers expected up to 150,000 demonstrators, according to a National Parks Services permit application. The agency does not document crowd sizes. The area of the Washington Monument grounds cordoned off was nearly full Friday, and buses of high school students, college ministry groups and seniors alike who traveled to the nation’s capital to demonstrate.

The Patriot Front, a white supremacist organization, also joined the march, holding a banner that declared: “Strong families make strong nations.” A live stream shared on X by News2Share’s Ford Fischer showed the group marching by the Washington Monument while carrying flagpoles with an upside down American flag, the Betsy Ross flag and a flag with the group’s logo. At one point, several teenage boys or young adult men walked past the group and gave members a fist bump.

Jeanne Mancini, president of March for Life, condemned the group’s presence in a statement: “March for Life promotes the beauty, dignity, and worth of every human life by working to end the violence of abortion. We condemn any organization that seeks to exclude a person or group of people based on the color of their skin or any other characteristic.”

Vance’s keynote address directly urged the crowd to think culturally, but also noted the government had a role to play in helping families.

“We failed a generation by not only permitting a culture of abortion on demand but neglecting to help young parents achieve what they need to have a happy and meaningful life,” he said. “We need a culture that celebrates life at all stages and truly believes the benchmark of national successes is not our GDP numbers or our stock market, but whether people feel they can raise healthy and thriving families in our country.”

For Liberty University students Evan Gaitonde, 18, and Bo Bishop, 19, the vice president’s pro-family message hit home.

“He knows what it’s like to be a father, he knows the joys of parenthood, and he wants to spread that to the generation of today to encourage us,” said Bishop, who was among the more than 1,000 students the Christian university bussed in.

“When I have kids one day I hope they get this kind of love and support from the community,” Gaitonde said.

Leaving the staging area, Gloria O’Brien, 66, stood out from the crowd in a sequined black beret with a gold sticker on the back reading “Made in the womb.”

The Guatemalan native said she found the level of controversy over abortion to be shocking when she arrived in the United States in her 30s.

“In Guatemala, every family loves babies,” she said. “When I hear that people are rejecting the babies, I was like, ‘why?’”

She and her husband, Gregory O’Brien, 60, are retired and living in a small town in Colorado. They said they were excited to attend their first antiabortion march.

As a former public school superintendent in Los Angeles County, Gregory O’Brien said he has been moved by watching young people grow throughout his career, and feels compelled to protect that potential.

While he said he’d love to see some federal policy changes under Trump, or more state constraints on abortion, it’s more of a new mentality among the American public that he’s after.

The goal is “to make it unthinkable,” he said.


(Originally published in Washington Post)

Filed Under: In the News

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