It was just last week when the White House held an event to commemorate Women’s History Month, which included some curious remarks from Donald Trump.
“We’re gonna have tremendous, tremendous goodies in the bag for women, too,” the president said, referring to his administration’s agenda. “The women, between the fertilization and all the other things we’re talking about, it’s gonna be great. Fertilization. I’m still very proud of it, I don’t care. I’ll be known as the fertilization president, and that’s OK, that’s not bad. I’ve been called much worse. Actually, I like it. I like it, right? Thank you.”
Trump: "We're gonna have tremendous goodies in the bag for women too. The women, between the fertilization and all the other things we're talking about, it's gonna be great. Fertilization. I'm still very proud of it, I don't care. I'll be known as the fertilization president and that's okay."
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-03-26T20:07:02.462Z
The Republican didn’t fully explain what he was trying to say, but in context, I think he was referring to in vitro fertilization, an expensive treatment that Trump, during the 2024 campaign, said he would make free to Americans during his second term. In fact, in mid-October, the Republican declared that he considered himself “the father of IVF,” which was every bit as ridiculous as it seemed.
Five months later, Trump nevertheless kept this going, predicting that he’d be “known as the fertilization president.”
That seems unlikely. For one thing, the president signed an executive order on IVF that did effectively nothing to make the treatments more affordable, campaign promises notwithstanding.
For another, the Trump administration just gutted its own IVF team. NBC News reported:








