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NEW JERSEY PRO-LIFERS RALLY TO PROTECT LIFE AT STATE HOUSE

September 25, 2025 By March for Life Leave a Comment

NEW JERSEY PRO-LIFERS RALLY TO PROTECT LIFE AT STATE HOUSE

Rally features Leading Pro-Life OB/GYN, the Bishop of Camden and other national and local advocates 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – September 25, 2025

Washington, D.C. – March for Life, in partnership with New Jersey Right to Life, will lead a rally and march for life in Trenton, NJ on September 25th. The march takes place in the shadow of New Jersey’s extreme abortion-until-birth policies.

“We are proud to join together with New Jersey Right to Life to stand against extreme abortion-until-birth policies,” said March for Life president Jennie Bradley Lichter. “Our goal is clear: protect babies, support women and ensure that the loving and compassionate voices of pro-life New Jerseyans are heard loud and clear at the State House and across the state.”   

 “We are excited to announce our second Annual NJ March for Life on Thursday, September 25th,” said Marie Tasy, executive director at New Jersey Right to Life. “We invite individuals of all ages to come together in our state capital to stand for the dignity of every human life. This peaceful, hope-filled march is a chance to advocate for the unborn and call for life-affirming changes in our laws. It’s time to let our voices be heard—because every life matters!”  

The New Jersey March for Life brings together a diverse group of pro-life New Jerseyans. Since the overturn of Roe vs. Wade, which restored the power to protect the unborn to the American people at both the state and federal level, March for Life has organized 30+ marches at state capitals in states across the country.  

 In New Jersey, there are 50+ life-affirming clinics, maternity homes, and pregnancy resource centers aiding women, children, and families, working to provide them with excellent healthcare and provide for their material needs at no cost. 

 

2025 New Jersey March for Life

What: The 2025 New Jersey March for Life

Location: In front of the New Jersey State House Annex (145 West State St., Trenton, NJ 08608)

When: Thursday, September 25, 2025

-10:00 a.m. Pre-Rally Concert

-11:00 a.m. Rally

-12:00 p.m. March

 

 Speakers at the rally include: 

–Dr. Christina Francis, CEO of AAPLOG – Keynote Speaker 

-Bishop Joseph Williams, Bishop of the Diocese of Camden

-Jennie Bradley Lichter, President of the March for Life

-Pastor Brennan Coughlin, pastor at Fellowship Crosspoint Church

-Marie Tasy, Executive Director of New Jersey Right to Life

-Joan Fasanello, Director of Life Choices, Phillipsburg, NJ

-State Senator Doug Steinhardt, New Jersey,  District 23

-Terysa Kish, proud mother

 

CONTACT: Pesch Strategy I Kate Monaghan Connolly  

kateconnolly@peschstrategy.com  

 646-717-4999  

###   

March for Life is a non-sectarian organization that promotes the beauty and dignity of every human life by working to end abortion – uniting, educating, and mobilizing pro-life people in the public square. It hosts the world’s largest annual human rights demonstration in Washington, DC every January.

Filed Under: Press Releases

September 22, 2025 By March for Life

Thousands gather outside PA capitol for March for Life

(ABC 27 WTHM) — The Pennsylvania State Capitol saw one of its biggest crowds of the year on Monday. Monday marks the fifth annual Pennsylvania March for Life. Organizers say it draws six or seven thousand people every year.

Now, the March for Life is holding state-based marches across the country and continues to work to shift the way the culture views the unborn.

People prayed this morning for the fallen York County officers who were killed in the line of duty last week and for conservative political activist Charlie Kirk, who was gunned down while speaking at a university in Utah two weeks ago. Organizers say security was heightened for this year’s march.

“Charlie brought the message of being pro-life and having babies and getting married as a real positive to young people and you’re going to see at this march, hundreds and hundreds of young people that Charlie would be proud to see,” says President and CEO of the PA Family Institute, Michael Geer.

The event is advocating for SB 973 and HB 606 that would teach early human development in schools.

“I think there is a cultural shift right now among our young people who are really looking for meaning in life, a deeper meaning in life, and I think causes like this point them, direct them to the beauty of human life,” says York Catholic director of faculty and campus ministry Paul Miller.

The march opposes HB 26 that would repeal parts of the Abortion Control Act and replace it with new guidelines that treat abortion like healthcare.

“There are lawmakers who are doing other things to try to expand and create more abortions in our state and then there’s legislation to advance the cause of life, especially in coming to the support of women who are in a situation they don’t know what to do to get the kind of support they need to bring that baby into the world,” Geer says.

Rep. Kinkead (D) Allegheny County says the event marchers for birth more so than life.

“I think that the March for Life being here on the day that we move gun safety legislation is tragically ironic because none of those people came inside to support any gun safety measures,” Kinkead says. “I would love for all of those people to come and address gun violence and support things that actually help to save lives. We have growing food insecurity. We have people dying of preventable diseases.”

It took more than 75 buses to bring the marchers from across Pennsylvania to the State Capitol.

The National Right to Life estimates there have been more than 65 million abortions in the U.S. since 1973.


(Originally published by ABC 27 WTHM)

Filed Under: In the News

September 22, 2025 By March for Life Leave a Comment

PENNSYLVANIA PRO-LIFERS RALLY AT STATE CAPITOL TO DEFEND LIFE

Faith leaders, medical professionals, and members of the Pennsylvania General Assembly will join the fifth annual Pennsylvania March for Life to advocate for the dignity of every human being

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – September 15, 2025 

  

Washington, D.C. – March for Life, in partnership with the Pennsylvania Family Institute, will lead a demonstration for life in Harrisburg, PA on September 22nd. Pro-life Pennsylvanians will gather on the steps of the Pennsylvania State Capitol for the fifth annual Pennsylvania March for Life. The demonstration highlights support for the dignity of every human being, beginning in the womb.

“Our message is clear: every life has value, and every voice matters,” said March for Life president Jennie Bradley Lichter. “We are proud to stand with the Pennsylvania Family Institute to protect the unborn and support women and families across the Commonwealth.”

“PA Family Institute is excited to partner with our friends at the national March for Life, along with other state and local leaders for the fifth annual Pennsylvania March for Life – by far the largest rally at the Capitol each year, as thousands of pro-life Pennsylvanians from across the Commonwealth will gather on the Capitol steps to be a voice for the voiceless,” said Pennsylvania Family Institute president Michael Geer. “Together, we’ll stand against the injustice of abortion in a united rally for the sanctity of life and the support of mothers and families. Join us in Harrisburg on Monday, September 22nd, for a day of advocacy, prayer, and a public commitment to the immeasurable worth and dignity of every human life.”

The Pennsylvania March for Life brings together a coalition of faith leaders, elected officials, medical professionals and grassroots advocates. Since the overturn of Roe v. Wade, March for Life has supported and organized more than 30 state-level demonstrations nationwide, empowering citizens to defend life at the statehouse and beyond.

Pennsylvania is home to 75+ free life-affirming clinics and resource centers providing women, children, and families with healthcare, guidance, and tangible support to meet their needs.

 

2025 Pennsylvania March for Life

What: The 2025 Pennsylvania March for Life

Location: On the steps of the Pennsylvania State Capitol in Harrisburg

When: Monday, September 22, 2025

-10:00 a.m. – Pre-Rally Praise & Worship

501 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg, PA 17120

-11:00 a.m. – Rally

-12:00 p.m. – Pennsylvania March for Life

 

Speakers at the rally include: 

-Ryan Bomberger – “Factivist” & Founder, Radiance Foundation

-Michael Geer – President, Pennsylvania Family Institute

-Jennie Bradley Lichter – President, March for Life

-Sarah Bowen – Founding President, Pennsylvania Pregnancy Wellness Collaborative

-Dr. Robby Waller – Emergency Medicine Physician, Penn State Health

-Rep. Kathy Rapp – Pennsylvania House of Representatives, 65th District

-Rep. Jesse Topper – Pennsylvania House of Representatives, 78th District

-Sen. Judy Ward –  Pennsylvania State Senate, 30th District

-The Most Reverend Nelson Perez – Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia

 

CONTACT: Pesch Strategy I Kate Monaghan Connolly  

kateconnolly@peschstrategy.com  

 646-717-4999  

###   

March for Life is a non-sectarian organization that promotes the beauty and dignity of every human life by working to end abortion – uniting, educating, and mobilizing pro-life people in the public square. It hosts the world’s largest annual human rights demonstration in Washington, DC every January.

Filed Under: Press Releases

August 4, 2025 By March for Life

Chemical Abortions, Sex Education: March for Life President Addresses Future of Pro-Life Movement

(The Daily Signal) — There has been a significant shift in the fight to protect the unborn since Roe v. Wade was overturned in the summer of 2022 with the Supreme Court’s ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.

Now, the March for Life is holding state-based marches across the country and continues to work to shift the way the culture views the unborn.

Jennie Bradley Lichter, who became the new president of the March for Life in February, says there is a need to highlight the joy, optimism, and compassion within the pro-life movement.

Lichter joins “Problematic Women” to share her own pro-life journey, and discuss how the pro-life movement is effectively working to save the unborn even as chemical abortions have become the most used form of abortion in the U.S. Lichter also discusses her work during the first Trump administration and answers the question: Can women have it all?

And speaking of culture: Have you seen the new American Eagle ad featuring actress Sydney Sweeney and the radical Left’s response? We give our take on why a classic marketing technique has the far Left crying “racism” and “fascism.”

Plus, former Vice President Kamala Harris is coming out with a book on her “107 Days” of a presidential campaign. Should be a fun read. We react to the news. All this and more on this week’s edition of “Problematic Women.”

Enjoy the show!

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  • America's Culture is Shifting. Are We Ready?

    America's Culture is Shifting. Are We Ready?

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(Originally published by The Daily Signal)

Filed Under: In the News

July 24, 2025 By March for Life

Blog Post Medina v. Planned Parenthood South Atlantic: Benefits are not Rights

(THE FEDERALIST SOCIETY) — Does an individual Medicaid beneficiary have a legal right, enforceable in civil litigation against the State, to take her taxpayer-funded Medicaid dollars to a provider whom the State has prohibited from participating in Medicaid reimbursement?

In Medina v. Planned Parenthood South Atlantic, the Supreme Court answered “No” to that question.  In a 6-3 opinion by Justice Neil Gorsuch, the Court held that Medicaid’s so-called  “any-qualified-provider” provision, 42 U.S.C. §1396a(a)(23)(A), does not clearly and unambiguously confer an individually enforceable right under 42 U.S.C. §1983. This decision not only resolves the dispute at hand, but also provides a detailed primer on when spending-power legislation creates an individually-enforceable right. This otherwise highly technical opinion, which barely references abortion, also implicates the ongoing debates regarding whether Planned Parenthood ought to continue to be supported by taxpayer dollars.

South Carolina law prohibits the use of public funds for abortions. Reasoning that Medicaid payments to abortion providers for any services would indirectly subsidize abortion, Governor Henry McMaster directed the South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services to deem abortion providers “unqualified” to provide services to Medicaid beneficiaries.  By extension, this made abortion providers ineligible to receive reimbursements from the state’s Medicaid program. Julie Edwards, a Planned Parenthood  client and Medicaid beneficiary, joined the organization in suing South Carolina under § 1983 of the Civil Rights Act, claiming that Planned Parenthood’s disqualification violated the §1396a “any-qualified-provider” provision of the Medicaid statute.

The two statutory provisions implicated by this claim bear a closer look.  First, §1983 allows individuals to sue state actors who deprive them of “rights” granted to them by the “Constitution and laws” of the United States.  However, federal statutes do not establish individually enforceable rights automatically—or even frequently.  What kind of statutory language triggers §1983 liability is one of the complex questions presented by this case.  The second statutory provision under the microscope in this case is the any-qualified-provider provision, §1396a(a)(23)(A) of the Medicaid Act, which appears in a long list of statutory requirements that a participating state’s Medicaid plan must meet.  This provision requires a state plan to ensure that “any individual eligible for medical assistance . . . may obtain” it “from any [provider] qualified to perform the service . . . who undertakes to provide” it. If a state fails to “substantially comply” with this obligation (or any other obligation in the laundry list), the Secretary of Health and Human Services is permitted to suspend Medicaid funding to the state. Respondents argued that the any-qualified-provider provision is among the rare federal statutes that create an individual right enforceable in court under §1983. Petitioners, of course, argued that it does no such thing.

During oral argument, the justices appeared sharply divided on these questions. Justices Sotomayor, Jackson, and Kagan appeared convinced that the any-qualified-provider provision does create an individually-enforceable right. Justice Thomas’ questioning focused on the exact language necessary for a statute to grant an individual an enforceable right, and Justice Kavanaugh likewise expressed a desire to adopt a bright-line test to clear up confusion in the lower courts. Justice Gorsuch—the eventual author of the majority opinion—focused in his questioning on the distinction between individual benefits in a statute and enforceable rights.

The majority opinion neatly cuts through the doctrinal thicket caused by diverging strands of Supreme Court precedent regarding when courts may read a private right of action into a statute, and particularly into legislation—like the Medicaid Act—authorized under Congress’s spending power. The Court clearly repudiated its prior precedents Wilder v. Va. Hosp. Ass’n, Wright v. City of Roanoke Redev. & Hous. Auth., and Blessing v. Freestone, which established too low a bar for finding individually enforceable rights.  (The Court characterized this repudiation as “longstanding,” but the lower courts—including in this case—had continued to apply those decisions, so it seems additional clarity was called for.)  It instead held that a spending-power statute confers an individually enforceable right—and not simply a mere benefit—only if it contains “clear and unambiguous” rights-creating language, as laid out in the Court’s prior cases Gonzaga Univ. v. Doe and Health & Hosp. Corp. of Marion Cnty. v. Talevski. As Talevski warns, very few statutes will meet this “stringent” and “demanding” test.  This high threshold is crucial in interpreting spending-power legislation, which Supreme Court precedent establishes is akin to a contract between the federal government and the state grantees; therefore, a state grantee may be subjected to private lawsuits under §1983 as a condition of its federal funding only if it has “voluntarily and knowingly” consented to taking on this burden as part of its bargain with the federal government.

Having established the correct test, the Court then holds that the any-qualified-provider provision in the Medicaid statute does not clearly and unambiguously create an individual right.  It is not sufficiently similar to the statutory provision at issue in Talevski, the key precedent in which a spending-power was held to clearly and unambiguously create an individual right.  The individual plaintiff in this case, therefore, does not have a right to sue the state under §1983.

Justice Thomas, who joined the majority opinion in full, wrote a solo concurrence calling for a reexamination of the Court’s §1983 jurisprudence, which he said “bears little resemblance to the statute as originally understood.” While agreeing that the majority properly applied Supreme Court precedent to resolve this particular case, Justice Thomas zooms out to the big picture and argues (i) that spending-power legislation, being contractual and conditional in nature and therefore incapable of “securing” any rights, can never give rise to a §1983 claim and (ii) that the Court should revisit what constitutes a “right” for purposes of §1983 litigation.

In dissent, Justice Jackson, joined by Justices Kagan and Sotomayor, argued that the majority erased individual rights that Congress created.  In the dissent’s view, the majority ignored the Medicaid Act’s intended purpose of ensuring healthcare autonomy and misread the text of the any-qualified-provider provision.  The dissent read §1396a to confer a right because Congress would not use both “classically compulsory and explicit individual-centric terminology” that is “classically associated with establishing rights” if it intended otherwise.  The majority responded by reinforcing the supremacy of the text over legislative intent and by arguing that the dissent’s approach is inconsistent with the Court’s precedent. The majority also argued that the dissent’s reading would result in the obliteration of the distinction between conferring a benefit and establishing an individual right, not just throughout the Medicaid Act but well beyond as well.

In summary, the Medina decision turns on technical legal questions about how to read a few words in the Medicaid statute, the contractual nature of spending-power legislation, and the scope of §1983 rights.  It is not, on its face, about abortion rights.  In fact, the word “abortion” appears just three times in the opinions issued by the Court—twice in the majority, once in the dissent— and all in recitations of the facts.  But the implications of this decision for continued government funding of abortion providers are vast.  The Court’s ruling that an individual Medicaid beneficiary cannot unilaterally overrule a decision made by a state’s elected leaders to prohibit funding to abortion providers clears the path for additional states to follow South Carolina’s lead and deem abortion providers unqualified to provide reimbursable Medicaid services.  Given that 18 state attorneys general signed amicus briefs supporting South Carolina, further efforts to limit funding to abortion providers are likely nationwide.

The timing of the decision also highlights its importance for the ongoing public debate over government funding for abortion providers, coming as it did just a week before Congressional passage of a federal one-year defund of abortion providers as part of President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill.  The public policy implications of this decision—much more than its helpful clarification of the legal test for when a statute creates an individually enforceable right—are likely to be its most significant legacy.

Note from the Editor: The Federalist Society takes no positions on particular legal and public policy matters. Any expressions of opinion are those of the author. We welcome responses to the views presented here. To join the debate, please email us at info@fedsoc.org.


(Originally published by Daily Wire)

Filed Under: In the News

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