Abortion

Pro-Life Leaders Debate Strategy Following Shifting State Ballot Results

Movement figures gather in Washington to reassess messaging and legislative priorities The summit’s opening keynote speaker L eaders of the national pro-life movement convened in Washington for a two-day summit to assess strategy following a series of ballot measure defeats in traditionally competitive states. Participants debated whether the movement’s messaging has kept pace with shifting public opinion and how to build durable coalitions that extend beyond a core religious base to reach persuadable voters. The summit drew over three hundred attendees representing national advocacy organizations, state legislative coalitions, crisis pregnancy networks, and Catholic and evangelical institutions. Sessions ranged from polling analysis to grassroots organizing strategy to theological reflection on what it means to pursue justice in a democratic society that does not share one’s moral premises. Several Catholic participants urged a renewed emphasis on practical support for mothers and families, arguing that the movement must be as visibly committed to life after birth as before. Others pushed back, warning against any softening of the legislative agenda that could be read as an acceptance of abortion as a permanent feature of American life. We will not win this fight with politics alone. We have to win it with love. The summit concluded without a unified statement, reflecting genuine and unresolved disagreement among movement leaders about the path forward. Organizers said a follow-up gathering is planned for the summer, with the goal of producing a shared strategic framework ahead of the midterm election cycle. Younger participants expressed a desire for a movement that is as known for its care of vulnerable women as for its opposition to abortion. Several said they felt the current public image of the movement is too narrowly identified with electoral politics and insufficiently rooted in the holistic vision of human dignity that animates the best of the Catholic social tradition.

Daniel Okafor

Mar. 6, 2026