Just two years ago, leading anti-abortion activists were euphoric as the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the , ending the nationwide right to abortion.
Now, with a presidential election fast approaching, their movement is disunited and worried.
Within their own ranks, there is second-guessing, finger-pointing and trepidation that Election Day might provide new proof that their cause is broadly unpopular.
Michael New, an abortion opponent who teaches social research at The Catholic University of America, offered an overview of how the movement fared since Roe was overturned in June 2022.
"Things have not necessarily unfolded as we would hope," he wrote in an email. "There is certainly a sense among pro-life leaders that we should have had a stronger post-Roe game plan in place."
People are also reading…
The anti-abortion movement recently saw a losing streak on abortion-related ballot measures in seven states, including conservative Kansas and Kentucky.
Nine more states will consider in the Nov. 5 election: Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada and South Dakota. In several of them, abortion opponents'Â were unsuccessful.
"Pro-life people don't wear rose-colored glasses; we know we have a huge task ahead of us," Carol Tobias, president of National Right to Life, said. "Because of the massive amounts of money being dumped into the ballot measures from those allied with the abortion industry and the Democratic Party, it's an uphill battle."
Still, she added she has "not seen flagging energy or any loss of determination among pro-life people."
Republican former President Donald Trump nominated Supreme Court justices who were crucial to overturning Roe and called it "a beautiful thing to watch" as various states took different directions.
Texas is among the Republican-governed states that enacted . Yet nationally, Texas Right to Life president John Seago said, the anti-abortion movement "is in a critical chapter right now."
He added, "we have realized that while we had enjoyed massive legislative and legal victories in the last decade, public opinion had not followed the same trajectory."
Troy Newman, who heads the anti-abortion group Operation Rescue, recently published an assailing the movement he's been a part of for 25 years.
"The tide has turned, and the pro-life message is now considered a political liability that could prevent President Trump's victorious return to the White House," Newman wrote.
"After evaluating the terrible mistakes of the pro-life movement over the last several years, I can only conclude that it is our fault," Newman wrote. "We have had over 50 years to change the culture's position on abortion only to have failed miserably."
In an interview, Newman blamed those in his own ranks for the predicament — saying some anti-abortion leaders should have been more adamant in their positions. "We lose the minute we stop focusing on the babies," he said.
Kristan Hawkins, leader of Students for Life of America, suggested via email that Newman's views were ill-suited to the post-Roe era. She said the students in her organization embraced the challenges of a state-by-state playing field.
But, "I actually believe the biggest threat is ourselves — our mindsets — which will lead to decreased recruitment, training, and mobilization of our grassroots army of love," she wrote recently in the conservative outlet Townhall.
"Look at the struggles we face this fall with several late-term abortion ballot referendums," she added. "Most will likely be a political loss for our movement because, in most states, a politically sophisticated, organized, and well-funded state-wide movement is not present."
Hawkins also acknowledged anger among some anti-abortion activists over the inconsistent rhetoric on abortion coming from the Republican presidential ticket of Trump and his running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance.
Trump has been evasive on whether he would if reelected and Congress were to approve one; his "leave it to the states" approach conveys acceptance that abortion is widely available in at least half the states.
Trump's support for a state-by-state solution was a factor in the decision of Charles Camosy, an anti-abortion Catholic academic, to declare he now feels politically estranged.
"The Republican Party has rejected our point of view. Democrats are running a candidate () who has made abortion rights a centerpiece of her campaign," Camosy, a medical humanities professor at Creighton University School of Medicine, wrote recently in The Atlantic.
"Pro-lifers — those who believe that protecting vulnerable and unborn life should be a primary policy priority — now do not fit in either major political party," he wrote.
In an interview, Camosy said abortion-rights supporters were better prepared for the post-Roe era than their adversaries, while some Republican-controlled legislatures — in his view — went too far with stringent abortion bans.
"I see this moment as an opportunity," Camosy wrote in The Atlantic. "Pro-life 3.0 must welcome people from multiple political and policy perspectives, working for both prenatal justice and social support for women and families."
Some other anti-abortion activists forcefully renounced Trump, including leaders of End Abortion Ohio.
"We call on God-fearing American voters to withhold their votes from Trump until he evidences genuine repentance for his pro-abortion stance," said the group's executive director, Nicholas Kallis.
However, others — like Ohio Right to Life President Mike Gonidakis — encourage support for Trump.
"A vast majority of our statewide membership absolutely support President Trump and believe he would advance the protection of life at the federal level … more than a Kamala administration would," Gonidakis said. "It is not even close."