One of my favorite moments of Rick Perry’s lengthy tenure as the Republican governor of Texas came in 2011, when he hosted an event in which he fielded questions from Texas Tribune chief Evan Smith. Relaying an inquiry from a voter, Smith asked, “Why does Texas continue with abstinence education programs, when they don’t seem to be working?”
Perry listened the question, thought for a second, and replied, “Abstinence works.”
The reporter pressed on, reminding the governor, “But we have the third-highest teen-pregnancy rate among all states in the country. The questioner’s point is, it doesn’t seem to be working.” The governor responded, “It — it works.”
In reality, Texas helped prove that pushing abstinence was spectacularly ineffective as a public policy — a fact Perry simply couldn’t bring himself to understand, data be damned — which is why it’s all the more discouraging to see the policy “make a comeback” now. The Hill reported last week:
In a marked departure from the previous administration, conservatives at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) are putting an emphasis on abstinence to reduce teen pregnancy rates.
So far, the administration has encouraged organizations applying for Title X federal family planning funds to include in their programs a “meaningful emphasis” on “the benefits of avoiding sex” when communicating with adolescents and to use programs that don’t “normalize sexual risk behaviors.”









