đ¨NEW: JD Vance SKIPS Vote to Protect IVF Access After Voting Against It in June, Showing Trump-Vance Ticket Wonât Stand Up For IVF
September 17, 2024
In response to JD Vance skipping todayâs Senate vote to protect access to IVF, DNC Spokesperson Aida Ross released the following statement:
âJD Vance celebrated when Donald Trump âproudlyâ overturned Roe v. Wade and paved the way for threats to IVF access for Americans who want to start or grow their family. Today, Vance couldnât be bothered to show up to vote on protecting IVF access, after voting against the same protections in June. Vance is showing us who he is and we should believe him. The American people will remember that Vance didnât show up for them, and theyâll make that clear when they reject the Trump-Vance ticketâs anti-choice Project 2025 agenda in November.â
NEW: JD Vance skipped todayâs vote on legislation to enshrine access to IVF for all Americans.
The Independent: âJD Vance didnât even show up to vote on [IVF protections].â
Jennifer Bendery, Huffington Post: âVance wonât be at todayâs Senate voteâŚâ
REMINDER: Donald Trumpâs MAGA minions in the Senate already blocked legislation to protect IVF access TWICE.
Associated Press: âRepublicans block Senate bill to protect nationwide access to IVF treatmentsâ
The Hill: âRepublicans block bill to protect access to IVFâ
âSenate Republicans blocked an effort Wednesday to pass legislation that would federally protect access to in vitro fertilization (IVF).â
The Hill: âSenate Republicans block legislation to codify IVF accessâ
Republicans who voted against include: JD Vance.
Vanity Fair: âOn Wednesday, Senate Republicans are expected to object to Tammy Duckworthâs Right to Build Families Act, because, surprise: They donât actually care about families and arenât âpro-life.â
ââItâs idiotic for us to take the bait,â Senator JD Vance told Politico, as though the measure were some kind of political trap. (He also noted that he had not actually read the bill yet.)â
Vance celebrated when Trump âproudlyâ overturned Roe v. Wade, paving the way for the Alabama Supreme Court ruling that stopped IVF treatments in the state.
Vance: âI think that what I really think on â so first of all, the Dobbs decision, everybody knows, overruled Roe v. Wade â I think that was the right decision.â
CNN: âHow the reversal of Roe v. Wade led to the Alabama Supreme Court ruling that frozen embryos are childrenâ
New York Times: â[The Alabama ruling was] made possible by the Supreme Courtâs overturning of Roe v. Wade in its 2022 Dobbs decision, which was a result of Mr. Trumpâs appointment of three justices.â
The Trump-Vance Project 2025 agenda would put at risk IVF access for millions of Americans, and Trump has spent years cozying up to his anti-freedom allies who are plotting the best ways for him to restrict it.
HuffPost: âDonald Trump Has Deep Ties To Anti-IVF Movementâ
âThe current Republican presidential nominee â who has repeatedly bragged about his role in repealing federal abortion protections â has deep ties to extreme right-wing organizations that actively oppose IVF.
âWhile in the White House, Trump and his administration praised, appointed and worked with some of the nationâs most extreme thought leaders who believe the IVF process is akin to murderâŚ
âDuring his time as president, Trump appointed several extreme anti-IVF advocates to positions of power.â
Media Matters: âThe Heritage Foundation quietly released draconian new IVF policy recommendations for the next GOP presidentâ
âThe list of policy suggestions in the recent blog post echoes the MAGA-backed Project 2025, a comprehensive plan Heritage has spearheaded for the next GOP presidential administration that includes calls to eliminate the term âreproductive healthâ from federal rules and regulations and to tighten restrictions on abortion rights and access to certain emergency contraceptives. In its pieces on IVF, Heritage expands on the extreme conservative agenda outlined by Project 2025.
âHeritage research associate Emma Waters has been a leading voice from the organization on reproductive issues, specifically denouncing IVF procedures and other âreproductive technologies.â
âMany of Watersâ other policy ideas are seemingly benign proposals meant to heighten the barrier of entry to securing IVF procedures, in much the same way anti-abortion lawmakers have used targeted restrictions on abortion providers.â
REMINDER: Vanceâs anti-choice record includes saying that heâd like âabortion to be illegal nationally,â attacking exceptions for rape and incest, and more.
CNN: âJD Vance said in 2022 he âwould like abortion to be illegal nationallyââ
âJD Vance said he âcertainly would like abortion to be illegal nationallyâ and was âsympatheticâ to the view that a national ban was necessary to stop women from traveling across states to obtain an abortion.â
Manu Raju, CNN: âJ.D. Vance, the Ohio GOP senator, says Republicans need to shift their approach on abortion and begin to embrace federal legislation ⌠âWe canât give into the idea that the federal Congress has no role in this matter,â he told us.â
Newsweek: âJ.D. Vance Backs âNational Standardâ for Abortionsâ
Washington Post: âOhio Senate candidate J.D. Vance argues against need for rape and incest exceptions in abortion lawsâ
Daily Beast: âJ.D. Vance suggested he would support prohibiting abortion even in cases of rape and incestâand dismissed those catalysts as âinconvenient.ââ
REALITY CHECK: Attacks on reproductive rights, like Trump and Vanceâs anti-choice Project 2025 agenda to block IVF access, are wildly unpopular.
ABC News: âAmericans continue to support IVF and abortion accessâ
âThe vast majority of registered voters, 80 percent, think IVF should be legal.â
Navigator Research: âLarge majorities say reproductive care like birth control pills and IVF should be made easier to access, including majorities of Republicans. ⌠Americans across party lines also say access to fertility planning like IVF should be easier to access, including 72 percent of Democrats, 59 percent of independents, and 53 percent of Republicans.â