President-elect Donald Trump’s victory has energized anti-abortion groups, even as abortion rights organizers notched victories on Election Day.
Reproductiverights.gov, which was launched by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in 2022, was offline Tuesday morning.
A government website that provided information on reproductive rights appears to have gone offline around the same time Donald Trump returned to office. Newsweek has contacted the Trump-Vance transition team and the Department of Health and Human Services for comment via email.
As part of the incoming Trump administration’s purge of information they would rather people not have access to, the website reproductiverights.gov has been taken offline, as first spotted by CBS News.
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) on Monday signaled that it planned to prioritize the enforcement of religious protections. | HHS on Monday signaled that it planned to prioritize the enforcement of religious protections.
President-elect Trump campaigned on leaving abortion decisions to the states, but that could prove a tough promise to keep as he returns to the Oval Office. Anti-abortion groups want Trump
At the March for Life rally, the president said he was ‘proud to be a participant’ in the Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade in 2022
In a move that global health workers say will likely have devastating consequences for women and girls throughout the world, President Donald Trump has reinstated a policy that bans foreign aid workers from offering information about abortion,
This policy also led to a surge in pregnancy-related deaths, according to the Center for Reproductive Rights. On Thursday, the president issued pardons for 23 anti-abortion activists who were ...
Karnik, federal policy director of the Guttmacher Institute, a research and policy nonprofit dedicated to advancing reproductive health and rights in the U.S. and around the world. Friedrich-Karnik unpacked Trump’s actions on reproductive rights so far and their implications for people seeking abortion care.
Washington, D.C. — A new report from the Center for American Progress examines how apps and consumer data could be weaponized to criminalize people who are seeking, providing, or supporting abortion care and what steps people can take to protect themselves.