The website reproductiverights.gov is no longer online. Based on archived pages, the website was online just days before Trump's inauguration. However, we do not know why the site is down and have reached out to the Trump administration to learn more.
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.
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
"As you know, I just signed a pardon and, in the pardon, we released 23 people that were unjustly put in having to do with pro-life," Trump said in remarks to reporters outside the White House Friday.
President "Trump had a particularly significant impact on the 9th Circuit" in his first term, moving the reliably liberal appeals court to the right. That could influence abortion policy in the West.
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.
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
The incoming Trump administration is expected to impose further restrictions on abortion with deadly effect, warn experts
North Dakota’s highest court ruled Friday to keep the state’s overturned abortion ban from being enforced during an appeal of a decision by a judge that struck down the law in September.
The site was launched in 2022 by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as part of a public awareness campaign.
Speakers will talk about ways that people can take action to protect reproductive rights, such as writing to lawmakers and supporting local clinics, Lis said. The event is open to the public for a suggested donation of $20, but reservations are recommended, and available at destigmatizedshow.com.