On October 20, 1968, a group of concerned Minnesota citizens gathered in St. Paul to formally establish the Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life (MCCL), one of the earliest organized pro-life groups in the United States. This event marked a pivotal moment in the nascent pro-life movement, predating the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision by over five years and embodying the conservative commitment to protecting unborn life as a fundamental human right.
The founding was driven by a coalition of liberal Democrats and Catholics inspired by 20th-century Catholic social teaching, who viewed the fight against abortion as an extension of New Deal and Great Society principles—advocating for the vulnerable, including the unborn poor. Key figures included Dr. Thomas B. Igel, a physician who emphasized the moral imperative to “fulfill our responsibility to children from the very moment of conception,” and other local activists alarmed by state-level pushes to liberalize abortion laws in the mid-1960s.
Internationally, this U.S.-based effort resonated with emerging global pro-life networks, influencing Catholic-led campaigns in Europe and Latin America where similar debates raged over family protections amid post-WWII social changes. MCCL’s early successes, such as blocking abortion expansions in liberal strongholds like Minnesota, helped catalyze the broader movement, which evolved to include evangelical conservatives by the late 1970s, reframing pro-life advocacy within “family values” and moral order.
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