It was nearly a month ago when Donald Trump, apropos of nothing, published a one-sentence missive to his social media platform. “The Republican Party is charging forward on many fronts,” the former president wrote, “and I am very proud that we are a LEADER on I.V.F.”
No one was altogether sure what he was talking about — especially given how many of his allies on the right are routinely opposed to IVF — though the GOP candidate added some clarity six days later. In an interview with NBC News, Trump said he’d have either the government or private insurance companies cover the cost of IVF treatments for American women who need it.
It was a strange announcement for a variety of reasons, and for reproductive rights advocates, the unexpected vow was difficult to take seriously. But the White House candidate’s declaration — Trump not only supports IVF, he claims it should be free — also gave Senate Democrats an idea.
If the Republican Party’s dominant leader is going to tell voters that the GOP is helping lead the way of IVF, then maybe Senate Republicans might reconsider their opposition to the Right to IVF Act, which Trump effectively endorsed online?
GOP senator rejected this same bill in June, but the former president inspired Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to give his opponents on the other side of the aisle a second try. To the surprise of no one, Republicans — the ones voters are apparently supposed to see as “leaders” on IVF — rejected the legislation again. NBC News reported:
For the second time in four months, Senate Democrats forced a vote on the Right To IVF Act, only to be blocked by Republicans who called it unnecessary and politically motivated as Vice President Kamala Harris seeks to make access to in vitro fertilization a 2024 campaign issue.
The legislation was written by three Senate Democrats — Washington’s Patty Murray, Illinois’ Tammy Duckworth and New Jersey’s Cory Booker — and it would prohibit states from imposing restrictions on the treatments, while also making IVF more affordable.
Two Republican senators — Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski and Maine’s Susan Collins — voted with the Democratic majority in the latest procedural vote, but every other GOP member balked. The final tally was 51 to 44, with some senators missing the vote.
To advance, proponents needed 60 votes, and they obviously didn’t come especially close.
Republicans vote to block the Right to IVF Act pic.twitter.com/qzgpjTDKsM
— Kamala HQ (@KamalaHQ) September 17, 2024
If these circumstances sound at all familiar, it’s not your imagination. In late February, Duckworth sought unanimous consent — a procedural move designed to help quickly advance uncontroversial measures — on the Access to Family Building Act, which would create legal protections for IVF at the national level. It also failed in response to Republican opposition.








