At A Rally In Michigan, Trump Pledges Free IVF For All In Second Term

At A Rally In Michigan, Trump Pledges Free IVF For All In Second Term

Trump said he supported IVF after several clinics paused their care following the Alabama decision.

Potterville:

Donald Trump said Thursday he would have the government or insurance companies cover the cost of in-vitro fertilization for "all Americans who need it" in a second term -- although he declined to say how he would pay for it.

Reproductive rights have been a major vulnerablity for the Republican White House nominee ever since the Supreme Court gutted federal protections for abortion access in 2022.

Trump's weakness was further exacerbated after an Alabama court ruled in February that frozen embryos created via IVF should be considered children.

Trump said he supported IVF after several clinics paused their care following the Alabama decision.

"I'm announcing today in a major statement that, under the Trump administration, your government will pay for -- or your insurance company will be mandated to pay for -- all costs associated with IVF treatment," he told a rally in Potterville, Michigan.

He offered no detail on how his proposal would work, including how it would be funded, but when the announcement was previewed in an interview with NBC ahead of the event, Trump said one option would be to have insurance companies pay "under a mandate."

Experts say the 2022 US Supreme Court ruling effectively granted states the final say on questions of personhood, paving the way for wide-reaching impacts on other areas of reproductive health, including IVF.

Few Americans have insurance plans that cover fertility treatments in any case, with costs of $20,000 or more for a single, 18-month round of IVF treatment too expensive for many.

The ex-president added that under a second Trump term, new parents would be able to deduct "major newborn expenses" from their tax bill, proclaiming that "we're pro-family."

Although his support for IVF has been consistent since the February ruling, Trump claimed numerous ideological positions on abortion before settling on his current view that the legalities around the procedure should be up to the states.

He told NBC News in 1999 he was "very pro-choice" before announcing he was "pro-life" in 2011 and that women who seek abortions should get "some form of punishment" in 2016.

Trump has taken credit for installing the Supreme Court justices who struck down federal abortion rights, and signaled Thursday how he may vote in a Florida referendum this fall which seeks to reverse his home state's six-week ban.

"I want more than six weeks," he told the Daily Mail. "I think six weeks is a mistake. And I'll be expressing that soon, but I want more than six weeks."

Trump and his election rival, Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris, are campaigning in swing states this week as they embark on the most intense phase of the campaign.

Harris, rallying in Savannah, Georgia, told supporters Trump would sign a national abortion ban into law if he won.

"Ours is a fight for the future. And it is a fight for freedom. Like the freedom of a woman to make decisions about her own body, and not have her government tell her what to do," she said.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

.