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President Donald Trump Thursday shrugged off pro-life concerns within its coalition over the White House’s recent announcement Initiative to increase access to in vitro fertility treatmentsThe latest reminder of IVF’s divisive status within the Republican Party.
When asked about Anti-abortion movement concerns over her work in support of IVFThe President said the White House plan to reduce costs on common IVF medication and encourage workplaces to insure such treatments was actually a pro-life policy.
“I think it’s very pro-life,” trump Said. “You can’t get more pro-life than this.”
As part of the plan, pharmaceutical manufacturer emd serono will offer lower prices on its popular Gonal-F drug, which the president said will be accessible through the administration’s upcoming TrumpRx website.
The initiative will also see federal agencies create new rules to reduce red tape and allow workplace insurance Offering fertility treatments as a standalone type of coverage, similar to dental or vision insurance.

Some in the broader pro-life movement criticized the president’s plan.
“I am grateful that there is no new health care mandate mandating coverage for the destructive IVF industry, but IVF, as it is practiced, still destroys countless humans in the embryonic stage,” said Kristen Hawkins, president of Students for Life. wrote On X. “It is time to find real solutions that help families grow and thrive without destroying lives in the process.”
“IVF kills more babies than abortion – millions of embryos are frozen, thrown away or destroyed,” says Lila Rose, founder of the anti-abortion group Live Action. wrote On X. “Only 7% of embryos created survive to birth. There is no solution to reproductive conflict.”
During the campaign, Trump was a vocal supporter of IVF, calling himself the “father” of the procedure and promising a policy that would Mandatory insurance companies or the government pay for the medical procedure.

In office, his actions have been more modest, and the Trump administration removed a team of CDC experts responsible for tracking IVF outcomes across the country.
Nonetheless, the President and his claims that the GOP will become “the party of IVF” have fractured parts of the Republican coalition.
Ann Scheidler, president of the Pro-Life Action League, said, “Although we share his desire for Americans to have more children, Trump’s plan to fund in vitro fertilization for all American women is in direct contradiction with that hope.” told Politico in September

Similar divisions have occurred at the state level, where, in the wake of conservatives appointed to the Supreme Court, Republicans have disputed IVF. Helping to overturn a constitutional right For abortion in 2022.
Last year, the Alabama Supreme Court cited a 2022 decision ruling that embryos are people, though state lawmakers quickly passed a bill restoring IVF access.
same intraparty controversies Has been played in states including Tennessee and Georgia.