The most "relevant" results that come up in a search of "abortion" on HHS.gov, the website for the federal Department of Health and Human Services, are several years old, from the first Trump administration.
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.
Reproductiverights.gov, which was launched by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in 2022, was offline Tuesday morning.
The role of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump’s pick to lead HHS, remains uncertain as his confirmation hearing hasn't been scheduled. Kennedy has previously expressed support for abortion access, a very different stance from Trump. Planned Parenthood has more on abortion access and services.
(An archived version of the site is still viewable through the Internet Archive.) These changes to ... the part of the new Trump administration on abortion. Abortion was not mentioned in Trump's ...
Several women who regret having an abortion — and men who regret that their unborn child was aborted — spoke in front of the steps of the Supreme Court on Friday.
Tuesday would have been the 52nd anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that guaranteed a nationwide right to abortion.
"In my second term, we will again stand proudly for families and for life," Trump told March for Life attendees via video.
Massachusetts sisters Paulette Harlow and Jean Marshall were among the anti-abortion activists President Trump pardoned: What they were convicted of.
Abortion information is disappearing from federal government websites, signaling potential changes in abortion under the second Trump administration.
President Trump and his Vice President JD Vance celebrate gains in the antiabortion movement with activists in the annual March for Life.
The March for Life on Friday brought together a movement invigorated by some early moves of the second Trump administration.