Diverse abortion-rights activists protesting outside the U.S. Capitol to repeal the Hyde Amendment, emphasizing economic and racial equity.
Diverse abortion-rights activists protesting outside the U.S. Capitol to repeal the Hyde Amendment, emphasizing economic and racial equity.
Billede genereret af AI

Abortion-rights groups intensify push to end the Hyde Amendment’s federal funding ban

Billede genereret af AI
Faktatjekket

Abortion-rights advocates are pressing Congress to scrap the Hyde Amendment, the long-running budget rider that limits federal abortion coverage. Organizers allied with the All* Above All campaign say the effort reflects a strategic shift toward framing the issue as one of economic and racial equity—and has helped move Democratic leaders toward supporting repeal.

The Hyde Amendment is an annual appropriations restriction first adopted in 1976, named for its sponsor, then–Representative Henry Hyde of Illinois. In recent years it has barred most federal funding for abortion—including through Medicaid—while allowing exceptions for pregnancies resulting from rape or incest, or when a pregnancy endangers the patient’s life. (congress.gov)

Hyde, who helped engineer the policy in Congress, argued in the late 1970s that he sought to prevent abortions across income groups. In one frequently cited 1977 remark, he said he would like to prevent “anybody having an abortion” if he could do so legally. (presidency.ucsb.edu)

Advocates say the policy’s effect has been most acutely felt by people with low incomes who rely on public insurance. An excerpt from Amy Littlefield’s 2026 book, published by The Nation, says that by 2010 Hyde had led “more than a million” people who could not afford an abortion to give birth instead. (thenation.com) (That estimate is widely referenced by abortion-rights groups; other organizations that support Hyde dispute such impact assessments, underscoring that conclusions vary depending on methodology and assumptions. (lozierinstitute.org))

The issue surfaced prominently during debate over the Affordable Care Act. During those negotiations, abortion coverage became a flashpoint, including pressure from anti-abortion Democrats, and the final law preserved Hyde-style limits on how federal subsidies could be used for abortion coverage. (en.wikipedia.org)

In the wake of those fights, a new set of organizations began coordinating more directly on public funding restrictions. The Nation excerpt describes organizers still referring to their emerging coalition as CAARE—short for the Coalition for Abortion Access and Reproductive Equity—as they considered leadership and strategy for a sustained campaign. (thenation.com)

From that organizing, All* Above All became the coalition’s public-facing campaign, seeking to shift the political argument from “taxpayer funding” to questions of equal access and structural inequity. (thenation.com) It backed federal legislation aimed at overturning the restrictions, including the Equal Access to Abortion Coverage in Health Insurance (EACH Woman) Act, introduced in 2015. (congress.gov)

Democratic presidential politics also moved. The Nation excerpt notes that by 2016, leading Democratic candidates—including Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders—were opposing Hyde, and the Democratic Party’s 2016 platform called for repeal. (thenation.com) In 2019, Joe Biden said he no longer supported Hyde, arguing that access to health care should not hinge on where someone lives. (en.wikipedia.org)

In 2021, House Democrats approved a package of appropriations measures that omitted Hyde language—an action civil-rights and abortion-rights groups described as unprecedented in modern budget fights, though the restriction remained in law after subsequent Senate action and final funding agreements. (aclu.org)

Kierra Johnson, a longtime reproductive-rights advocate, told The Nation that the shift inside Democratic politics happened quickly enough that some lawmakers later spoke as though they had always been aligned with repeal efforts. (thenation.com) The campaign has emphasized leadership by women of color and the reproductive justice framework, which links abortion access to broader economic and racial inequities. (allaboveall.org)

Hvad folk siger

X discussions on efforts to repeal the Hyde Amendment feature pro-repeal advocates, including All* Above All and Democratic lawmakers like Sens. Duckworth and Reps. Tlaib and Pressley, framing it as discriminatory against low-income people and communities of color. Pro-life users and organizations defend it for protecting taxpayer funds and saving lives, citing polls and Trump's recent enforcement executive order. Skeptical voices criticize Democrats for failing to repeal it during past majorities, while some Republicans express concern over party leaders potentially abandoning it.

Relaterede artikler

Split-image illustration depicting political rift in Republican Party: Trump advocating flexibility on Hyde Amendment versus angry anti-abortion activists protesting.
Billede genereret af AI

Anti-abortion groups criticize Trump call for ‘flexibility’ on Hyde Amendment as GOP debates health care deal

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI Faktatjekket

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.

A growing minority of Republicans and pro-life activists are pushing to criminalize abortion, including for women, in response to self-managed abortions after Roe v. Wade's overturn. This stance has sparked divisions within the pro-life movement, with traditional groups opposing it as counterproductive. Bills have been introduced in multiple states, but none have advanced significantly.

Rapporteret af AI Faktatjekket

A federal judge in Boston has issued a new order blocking the Trump administration from enforcing a Medicaid provision in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that would cut off funding to Planned Parenthood and similar providers in more than 20 Democratic-led states. The ruling, in a lawsuit brought by a multistate coalition, finds that the law likely violates constitutional limits on federal spending by failing to give states clear notice of how to comply.

After the U.S. Senate rejected dueling plans to address expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies, the fight has spilled into 2026 midterm politics and shifted pressure to the House, where Republicans are advancing alternative premium‑relief ideas while centrists push for an extension.

Rapporteret af AI Faktatjekket

The U.S. Senate on December 11, 2025, failed to advance two partisan proposals aimed at addressing rising health insurance costs on the Affordable Care Act marketplaces before enhanced federal subsidies expire at year’s end. Democrats pushed a three-year extension of the subsidies, while Republicans backed redirecting federal assistance into health savings accounts, but neither bill secured the 60 votes needed to move forward, leaving millions of Americans facing steep premium increases without further congressional action.

A Democrat-sponsored bill to allow terminally ill adults in Illinois to obtain life-ending medication has cleared the General Assembly and awaits Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s review following a 30–27 Senate vote in the early hours of Oct. 31, after House passage in May.

Rapporteret af AI Faktatjekket

As national Democrats elevate an “affordability” message heading into the 2026 midterms, two candidates running in deep-red rural territory say the pitch can fall flat unless the party also invests in organizing and long-shot races that rarely draw national attention.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis