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Activists renew defunding drive after Planned Parenthood reports record-breaking year of abortions

As Planned Parenthood reports a record 434,450 abortions of unborn babies in 2023-2024, advocates for unborn children renew their call to permanently defund the group.

Planned Parenthood performed an all-time high of 434,450 abortions of unborn babies in 2023-2024, according to the organization's annual report.

Almost half of Planned Parenthood's revenue came from taxpayer dollars, even as abortion services increased and other services dwindled, according to the group's 2024-2025 annual report. Notably, Planned Parenthood also registered a net loss of revenue for the first time in recent years.

In response to the report, advocates for unborn children are renewing their call to permanently defund Planned Parenthood.

Abortion a priority for Planned Parenthood

The all-time high abortion count is an 8% increase from the previous year, about 32,000 more abortions than the previous year. The number does not include telehealth chemical abortions, which are a growing percentage of all abortions.

Planned Parenthood's other services like preventative care, pap tests, and cancer screenings all decreased from the previous year, continuing a decade-long trend, according to a report by the Charlotte Lozier Institute, a research and education group that advocates for unborn children and mothers.

The recent annual report is "consistent with long-term trends," Michael New, a Charlotte Lozier Institute scholar and Catholic University of America assistant professor, told EWTN News.

"During the past 10 years, the number of abortions performed by Planned Parenthood has increased by over 34%," New said. "Meanwhile, cancer screenings fell by more than 42% and prenatal services declined by more than 55% during the same time period."

"They perform nearly 40% of the abortions that take place in the United States," New added. "Abortion is a very large revenue source for them so it is unsurprising they prioritize abortions while cutting back on some health care services."

Tessa Cox, another senior research associate at the institute, noted that "over the past decade, abortions, government funding, and total revenue soared, even as the number of clients served has declined and total services have stagnated."

Dr. Christina Francis, who heads the American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians and Gynecologists, said that "an organization that touts death as health care and a main driver of their services can hardly be expected to be taken seriously as a health care provider."

"With each annual report, Planned Parenthood proves it's more concerned with planning abortions than promoting the beauty and strength of motherhood," Francis told EWTN News.

Advocacy goals: Defunding Planned Parenthood

In spite of the decline in other services, more taxpayer funding continues to go to Planned Parenthood.

In 2023-2024, the abortion provider received more than $830 million in government grants, contracts, and Medicaid reimbursements — about $40 million more than the previous year. This was a 50% increase from 2014, or 10% when adjusted for inflation.

New noted that "Planned Parenthood is heavily dependent on taxpayer funding."

"It is unsurprising that after they were made ineligible for federal Medicaid money starting in fiscal 2026, approximately 50 Planned Parenthood facilities ceased operations," New noted.

Advocates for unborn children agree: Defunding Planned Parenthood is a priority, especially in light of the report.

"Defunding Planned Parenthood remains an important policy goal for pro-lifers," New said.

Though the movement to defund Planned Parenthood saw some success last year, President Donald Trump's budget only defunds abortion providers for one year.

"Pro-lifers should encourage President Trump and congressional Republicans to pass a 2027 budget that prevents Planned Parenthood from receiving federal Medicaid dollars," New continued. "That said, cutting funding to Planned Parenthood may not have a large impact on the incidence of abortion in the short term due the increasing prevalence of telehealth abortions."

Noah Brandt, a spokesman for Live Action, a human rights group that advocates for unborn children, said that "32,000 more innocent children were killed than the year before."

"These tragic numbers show exactly why we can't settle for a one-year pause of the abortion giant's federal funding, which expires on July 4, 2026," Brandt told EWTN News.

"Congress needs to extend the defund and make it permanent to shut down the flow of public dollars to an organization that's killing nearly half a million American children every year," he continued.

Francis noted the importance of cultural change and legal safeguards for chemical abortion pills.

"The pro-life movement has two battles: fighting the anti-motherhood narrative that's infected American society and the abortion pill epidemic flooding the internet thanks to the Biden administration's reckless policies and the Trump administration's unwillingness to restore safeguards for abortion drugs," Francis said.

Cox added that "women deserve better alternatives," noting that these alternatives "outnumber Planned Parenthoods by 15 to 1 nationwide."

Planned Parenthood did not respond to a request for comment by the time of publication.

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