Skye Perryman can’t remember a time when women’s reproductive rights weren’t under threat.
As a young girl growing up in Waco, Texas, she remembers seeing graphic, anti-abortion flyers in the mailbox, including ones that suggested a person would go to hell if they supported someone who needed an abortion.
Perryman, who grew up in an all-female household with her mom and sister, knew the flyers weren’t right or just.
“They were made to scare people,” Perryman said. “…It always just struck me as something that was intended to divide people. I saw how [reproductive healthcare] was politicized at a very early age.”
It was that mentality that helped shape the work Perryman, 42, does today.
Perryman is now president and CEO of the national organization Democracy Forward, and has had a formidable career protecting women and reproductive rights, especially after the 2022 Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade, which had previously guaranteed women’s constitutional rights to an abortion.
After landing on the TIME 100 list earlier this year, Perryman has emerged as an outspoken opponent to Trump’s attacks on free speech, civil rights and access to reproductive health care.
And now — with 19 states banning abortion or restricting the procedure earlier in pregnancy than the standard set by Roe v. Wade — Perryman’s work is arguably more important than ever before.
“We’re certainly in a moment that the vast majority of people don’t want to see, a moment where the generation of women that are coming up now … have less rights than I did when we graduated college,” said Perryman. “We are in a generational-defining moment for women’s healthcare and we’ve seen generational setbacks that are going to take a long time to rebuild.”
After a career at two big law firms, Perryman joined Democracy Forward’s founding litigation team during the first Trump administration. That group sued to challenge his executive actions more than 100 times. But about a year in — and with the recognition that women’s access to reproductive health was in jeopardy — she was tapped to join the executive team of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), the nation’s leading association of physicians dedicated to the health of women.
At ACOG, Perryman oversaw the successful litigation of suing the FDA to allow mifepristone (used for medication abortions) to be prescribed via telehealth and shipped via mail during the COVID-19 pandemic. She also led a policy strategy that enhanced access to Medicaid for postpartum women in the COVID-19 pandemic.
After the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol, Perryman returned to Democracy Forward as president and CEO, with the goal of fighting for democracy on all fronts. She soon crafted a legal strategy on behalf of the generic manufacturer of mifepristone to find new ways to protect access to pregnancy termination in states.









