Michigan Dems warn about Project 2025 and reproductive health care in a 2nd

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As Republicans gather in Milwaukee for the Republican National Convention, Democrats across the nation are continuing to sound the alarm on Project 2025, a collection of far-right policy proposals pitched as a transition plan for a conservative presidential administration.

Created by the conservative Heritage Foundation, the initiative centers its proposals on four goals: “Restore the family as the centerpiece of American life and protect our children,” “Dismantle the administrative state and return self-governance to the American people,” “Defend our nation’s sovereignty, borders, and bounty against global threats” and “Secure our God-given individual rights to live freely — what our Constitution calls “the Blessings of Liberty.”

As questions surrounding President Joe Biden’s mental sharpness and viability as a candidate continue to plague the campaign, Democrats have shifted their focus to Project 2025, tying the far-right blueprint to former President Donald Trump. 

While the former president has attempted to distance himself from the effort,  disavowing some of its proposals and stating “I have no idea who is behind it,” in a post to Truth Social, Project 2025 has been tied to a number of former Trump administration employees.

A review from CNN found 140 former members of the Trump administration, including six former cabinet members, had contributed to Project 2025’s  more than 900-page “Mandate for Leadership.” 

The document includes a myriad of proposals restricting pregnancy and abortion, including removing emergency contraception from services that must be covered by the affordable care act, calling on the FDA to reverse its approval of chemical abortion drugs such as mifepristone, barring hospitals from providing emergency abortion care and enforcing restrictions against mailing abortion medication. 

During a Wednesday press conference in support of Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, state Rep. Penelope Tsernoglou (D-East Lansing), Lansing Mayor Andy Schor and infertility physician Dr. Molly Moravek shared concerns that electing Trump and Ohio U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance, Trump’s newly announced pick for vice president, could lead to a nationwide ban on abortion and in vitro fertilization (IVF).

“Trump has given us no reason to doubt that he will gut our reproductive rights; it’s the one promise that he has delivered on,” Tsernoglou said, noting the former president’s pride in appointing the Supreme Court Justices who helped the Court overturn Roe v. Wade. 

State Rep. Penelope Tsernoglou (D-East Lansing) discusses her experience as a “proud IVF mom,” and warns of the impact a second Trump presidency would have on reproductive rights. | Kyle Davidson

Moravek noted her infertility patients also face a higher risk for an ectopic pregnancy, where the pregnancy occurs outside the uterus. This is the number one cause of early maternal mortality and there is no medical procedure that can save the pregnancy, Moravek said. 

“Saving that woman’s life could be illegal for doctors like me if Trump takes office again and an abortion ban is imposed…

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