Anti-abortion advocates who form a key part of the Republican coalition are warning that President Donald Trump’s public suggestion that Republicans be “flexible” on the Hyde Amendment—a long-standing budget provision restricting federal funding for most abortions—could depress turnout among pro-life voters. The dispute intensified after a Trump-aligned consultant was reported to have referred to pro-life voters as “a cheap date,” prompting backlash from groups such as Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America.
Kelsey Pritchard, the communications director for Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, argued in a Jan. 12 opinion essay published by The Daily Wire that pro-life voters have been among the Republican Party’s most dependable supporters in recent years and that the party risks demobilizing them if it compromises on the Hyde Amendment.
The flashpoint is Trump’s recent remark to House Republicans that the party may need to be “a little flexible” on Hyde as lawmakers discuss health-care-related legislation. The Associated Press reported the comment was made during a House Republican retreat as Republicans weigh ways to revive or replace Affordable Care Act insurance assistance that expired at the end of 2025.
Pritchard’s essay casts Trump’s “flexible” remark as a break from his previous positioning on Hyde. She pointed to a Trump executive order issued early in his second term—Executive Order 14182, dated Jan. 24, 2025—which states: “It is the policy of the United States, consistent with the Hyde Amendment, to end the forced use of Federal taxpayer dollars to fund or promote elective abortion.”
The Hyde Amendment is not a standalone statute but a policy rider that Congress has attached to annual appropriations bills since 1976. It generally bars federal funds from being used for abortions, while allowing limited exceptions, including cases of rape, incest, or when a pregnancy endangers the patient’s life.
Pritchard’s commentary also highlighted a broader concern within parts of the anti-abortion movement that pro-life voters are being taken for granted, citing reporting that a Trump-aligned consultant described pro-life voters as “a cheap date.”
Some of the strongest claims in Pritchard’s piece—such as the assertion that Hyde has “saved an estimated 2.6 million lives,” that the Affordable Care Act was “deliberately designed to sidestep Hyde,” and that exactly 15 House Democrats lost seats specifically because of backlash to that design—are presented in her essay as political arguments and are not independently substantiated with underlying data in the materials cited in the opinion piece.
On public opinion, Pritchard wrote that “six in ten Americans” oppose requiring taxpayers to fund abortion and cited PRRI for the contention that voters who oppose abortion report higher intensity about the issue than supporters. The essay also pointed to a Newsweek political column that described Hyde as “polling better than anyone in Congressional leadership,” though that statement appeared as a rhetorical aside rather than a citation to a specific poll.
Looking ahead to the 2026 midterms, Pritchard warned that pro-life voters who feel betrayed may stay home rather than vote for Democrats. She wrote that her organization plans to contact 10.5 million voters across key battleground contests, including 4.5 million door-to-door visits.
Trump’s comment has drawn swift resistance from anti-abortion advocates, while some Republican leaders have indicated they intend to keep Hyde-style restrictions in place as health-care negotiations proceed.