One Month of Trump 2.0: Amidst All the Chaos, Attacks on Reproductive Health and Rights

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Yesterday marked one month of President Donald Trump’s second term. Amidst the weeks of chaos and confusion, the President picked up right where he left off from his first term, resuming attacks on reproductive rights and access to care. 

Within days of taking office, Trump acted to rescind President Joe Biden’s executive orders to protect reproductive health care, scrub information about these essential health services from government websites, impose global restrictions on the provision of abortion care and information, nominate a slew of anti-abortion extremists to his administration, and more.  

The Center for Reproductive Rights has been chronicling these and other developments on Repro Red Flags: Agency Watch, a new web tool featuring information on Trump’s key nominees and appointees, their anti-repro backgrounds, and the powers of the agencies they will oversee. 

Below, the Center takes a closer look at confirmed Trump officials and the substantial steps the administration has already taken to target and diminish reproductive rights both in the U.S. and abroad. 

Anti-Repro Nominees

President Trump is stacking the government with anti-reproductive rights officials responsible for leading critical federal health programs and providing reproductive health services domestically and globally. While high-ranking government positions (such as agency heads) require Senate confirmation, thousands of other officials are simply appointed by the President and assume office immediately.  

Senate-confirmed officials with alarming anti-reproductive rights backgrounds include:

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who was unanimously confirmed on the President’s first day in office and acts as the President’s chief foreign affairs officer.

  • In this role, Secretary Rubio oversees the implementation of global reproductive rights norms and standards, in addition to funding for international health programs directly linked to the “Global Gag Rule”—which restricts U.S. foreign assistance to organizations providing abortion services or information.
  • Rubio, a former Senator, established a long track record of advocating for anti-abortion policies, including a national abortion ban, and has stated he believes life begins at conception and that IVF poses a “very difficult bioethical issue.”

Attorney General Pamela Bondi, who now leads the Department of Justice (DOJ) and serves as the federal government’s chief law enforcement officer.

  • Bondi will be responsible for enforcing the Freedom of Access to Clinical Entrances (FACE) Act—which protects patients and providers from violence and harassment; overseeing the National Task Force on Violence Against Health Care Providers—which combats violence against health care providers; and determining the Department’s position on the Comstock Act—a Victorian era anti-sex law that extremists are hoping to misapply to restrict access to, or even ban, abortion nationwide.
  • As Florida Attorney General, Bondi joined amicus briefs advocating for limits on abortion and contraception access and defended the state’s abortion restrictions in court. During her Senate confirmation hearing, Bondi agreed to use her position as Attorney General to protect crisis pregnancy centers—anti-abortion fake clinics that try to block patients from accessing abortion services—and answered questions regarding the DOJ’s efforts to protect access to medication abortion by stating that she is “personally pro-life.”

Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Russell Vought, who is responsible for developing the President’s budget.

  • In this role, Vought is responsible for making funding recommendations related to government reproductive health care programs, including the Title X family planning program, the Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program, and the United Nations Population Fund, which works to improve reproductive and maternal health worldwide. He also has the power to fast-track regulations that restrict reproductive health care.
  • Vought was a co-author of Project 2025, the blueprint for Trump’s second term outlining plans to utilize all the available instruments of the federal government to decimate access to abortion. He has also stated that he does not believe in abortion exceptions for rape, incest, or to save the life of the pregnant person. In responding to a question about the Global Gag Rule during his confirmation hearing, Vought stated that he “will implement anything the President has asked [him] to direct.”

Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who now oversees all Department policy and administers major federal programs and agencies critical to reproductive health care.

  • In this role, Kennedy’s oversight includes such programs and agencies as Medicaid, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and the Title X program.
  • During his confirmation hearing, Kennedy made clear he would readily implement a wide range of anti-abortion policies, which could include reinstating the Title X domestic gag rule, prohibiting research using fetal tissue, restricting access to medication abortion via telehealth, ending abortion later in pregnancy, strengthening religious refusals of care, and eliminating “federal funding for abortions here or abroad.”

Executive Actions

President Trump and his officials took swift action to change domestic and foreign policies and erase information on reproductive health care.

Erasing Information—and Transgender People

Foreign Policy: Withdrawing Aid, Imposing Restrictions

Domestic Policy: Removing Protections, Imposing Restrictions

Looking Ahead

It’s clear that we can expect this chaos and confusion—and the attacks on reproductive rights and health—to continue over the next four years.

The Center’s Federal Policy team will continue to remain on high alert, tracking key policies impacting abortion access, maternal health, assisted reproduction, and other reproductive health and rights issues.

Repro Red Flags: Agency Watch will help you keep on top of it all—actions by the president, his officials, and the agencies they manage—and how they directly impact the reproductive health and rights of Americans, as well as people across the globe. The tool, updated on an ongoing basis, will also continue to provide opportunities to take action against the administration’s harmful nominees and policies.

Check out Repro Red Flags: Agency Watch here.