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2024 Year in Review: A Monumental Year for Reproductive Freedom

2024 marked a monumental year for reproductive rights—abortion was at the center of elections across the country, from statehouses to the White House.
While the presidential election didn’t yield the results we hoped for, our efforts laid the groundwork for future victories and served as a reminder that every action is an important contribution toward securing reproductive freedom for all.
Now, we’re ready to hit the ground running in 2025 to fight for the values and fundamental freedoms that unite us.
Join us in taking a look back at 2024.
Reproductive Freedom for All Runs Its Largest-Ever Electoral Program to Galvanize Voters for the 2024 Election
Knowing the stakes of this election and the consequences for abortion access, Reproductive Freedom for All ran its largest electoral program in our organization’s history in 2024 to secure victories for reproductive freedom champions up and down the ballot in states across the country.
Our electoral program focused on engaging members and voters like never before through phone banks and text banks, canvasses, and online mobilization.
Supreme Court Weighs in on Two Abortion Cases
The Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority appointed by Donald Trump continued to favor the anti-abortion, right-wing extremists lining their pockets by refusing to protect abortion rights and access.
In June, the Court handed down its decision in Idaho v. United States—a case to determine if states can deny pregnant people emergency abortion care. The Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) ensures people can access emergency medical care, even if they do not have insurance or are otherwise unable to pay for it—but instead of clearly affirming pregnant people’s right to emergency abortion care, the Court kicked the decision back to a lower court for further litigation.
In Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. FDA, a junk-science case that should have never been taken up by the Supreme Court in the first place, the Court ruled to not impose restrictions on mifepristone—a medication that is safely and effectively used in abortion care and miscarriage treatment. Although the Court did not impose restrictions on the vital medication, its final decision left mifepristone open to further attacks from anti-abortion extremists, including the Trump administration. Project 2025 outlines plans to have the FDA reverse its approval or severely restrict the availability of mifepristone.
The Supreme Court’s actions in 2024 reaffirmed the critical and imminent need for court reform, especially with Trump poised to potentially select two new justices during his time in the White House.

Reproductive Freedom for All Launches Spanish Media Program
.@ReproForAll's @SilvinalaLatina habla con @JorgeRamosNews de lo que queremos para el 2024. Basta de quitarnos nuestros derechos básicos. 4 de cada 10 latinas no tienen acceso a servicios de aborto. Demandamos libertad reproductiva para todas. pic.twitter.com/s4uVJxWElD
— Reproductive Freedom for All (@reproforall) August 27, 2024
Reproductive Freedom for All debuted its Spanish media program at the Democratic National Convention in an effort to bring more accurate, unbiased information about pregnancy and abortion care to Spanish-speaking supporters, a community that has long been overlooked in the fight for reproductive freedom and targeted by anti-abortion disinformation.
Reproductive Freedom for All also worked in tandem with the Harris Hispanic media communications team on opportunities where Spanish language spokespeople could be used to uplift reproductive freedom messaging ahead of the election.
Kamala Harris Runs Historic Presidential Campaign
Reproductive Freedom for All President Mini Timmaraju with Vice President Kamala Harris.
Reproductive Freedom for All was proud to endorse Vice President Kamala Harris for the 2024 presidential race.
Vice President Harris’ candidacy was a historic victory for reproductive freedom. She is the first president or vice president to visit an abortion clinic and has worked tirelessly with President Biden over the past four years to make an indelible mark on the fight for reproductive freedom—cementing the Biden-Harris administration as the most pro-reproductive freedom administration in U.S. history.
Vice President Harris’ groundbreaking candidacy brought us one step closer to electing the first woman, the first Black woman, and the first person of South Asian American descent to serve as president.
Voters Approve Abortion Ballot Measures in Seven States, including Nevada and Arizona
Nevadans holding up signs to support Question 6, the ballot measure to enshrine abortion rights in the Nevada Constitution.
Voters in Nevada and Arizona secured huge wins for abortion access in the Southwest by approving ballot measures to lock abortion rights into the state constitutions, and we were proud to be leaders in the coalitions—Arizona for Abortion Access and Nevadans for Reproductive Freedom—that made these victories possible. Arizonans approved the “Proposition 139” ballot measure, while Nevadans approved the “Question 6” ballot measure. Question 6 will appear again on the 2026 ballot.
Arizona’s victory in passing Proposition 139 came just months after Arizona successfully repealed the state’s 1864 abortion ban which the Arizona Supreme Court—a court stacked by anti-abortion extremists—upheld earlier in 2024.
Reproductive freedom voters also won ballot measures in Colorado, Maryland, Missouri, and Montana. These crucial victories for reproductive health care access prove that abortion continues to be a salient issue for voters nationwide in blue, red, and purple states.
ProPublica Shines a Light on Preventable Deaths as a Result of Abortion Bans
In October and November, ProPublica released a series of reports highlighting the preventable deaths of Amber Nicole Thurman and Candi Miller in Georgia, and Josseli Barnica, Nevaeh Crain, and Porsha Ngumezi in Texas as a result of abortion bans in the two states. Their deaths rest squarely on the shoulders of Donald Trump, who overturned Roe v. Wade and gave state lawmakers the green light to ban abortion, and Georgia Governor Brian Kemp and Texas Governor Greg Abbott, who signed these abortion bans into law.
Following the reports, Georgia dismissed its maternal mortality committee, which is tasked with investigating such deaths, and Texas announced its maternal mortality board will not perform a full review of deaths that occurred in 2022 and 2023—the two years directly following the Dobbs decision and Texas’s ban on abortion going into effect.
Donald Trump Nominates Extremists to Serve in His Administration
Since winning his bid for president, Donald Trump has wasted no time naming a hateful group of anti-abortion, anti-freedom extremists to serve in his administration and help him implement Project 2025—a 900-page document that will serve as the blueprint for Trump’s presidency and details numerous ways the administration can trample on our fundamental freedoms such as abortion, access to contraception, and more.
Trump’s nominations for his second administration are anti-abortion ideologues whose litmus test is if they will be loyal to Trump. Marco Rubio, Pam Bondi, RFK Jr., Mehmet Oz, Martin Makary, and Russ Vought are key cabinet nominees who, if confirmed, will put Trump’s agenda ahead of the country. These extremist nominees show that Trump is clearing the pathway to implement his Project 2025 agenda to attack abortion access and contraception across multiple federal agencies and to further restrict access to reproductive healthcare nationwide.

Looking To 2025
In 2024 we secured decisive wins for reproductive freedom across the country and laid the groundwork for future victories. Our volunteers made 5.8 million phone calls, knocked on more than 548,000 doors, and sent 45 million text messages to voters across the country to support these efforts.
Through these remarkable strides, we made it clear that we aren’t backing down on securing reproductive freedom for every American.
With an incoming Trump presidency and 22 states currently enforcing bans or restrictions on abortion, we’re building up our defenses and getting ready to kick off 2025 by building power on the ground nationally and in key states, supporting leaders at the state and national levels who will fight to protect and expand reproductive freedom, and holding lawmakers accountable to the majority of Americans who support abortion rights and access.


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