The Trump administration has taken a significant step toward reviving pro-life guardrails in federal family-planning policy, issuing new Title X funding guidance that could once again force Planned Parenthood to choose between performing abortions and receiving taxpayer-backed grants. The Department of Health and Human Services released a new notice of funding opportunity that tells applicants they must uphold Hyde protections and may not use taxpayer resources to “promote or support elective abortion.”
The move does not yet fully restore the first Trump administration’s “Protect Life Rule,” but it clearly lays the groundwork for doing so. That earlier rule barred Title X funds from going to programs where abortion was used as a method of family planning and helped create a sharper separation between federally funded services and abortion providers. Biden later rescinded that approach, allowing a looser interpretation under which clinics could continue abortion-related operations so long as federal funds were not used directly for the procedure itself.
Under the new guidance, HHS says Title X projects should focus on fertility awareness, family formation, and underlying conditions affecting reproductive health, including endometriosis, fibroids, hormonal disorders, and related chronic issues. The notice also emphasizes natural family planning among the options grant recipients may provide. Supporters say the change brings Title X back in line with both the text of federal law and long-standing Hyde Amendment principles.
The practical effect could be substantial. Planned Parenthood previously withdrew from Title X in 2020 rather than comply with the original Protect Life Rule, giving up tens of millions of dollars in grants. If the administration finalizes a restored rule in similar form, abortion providers may again face the same choice.
This latest step also fits a wider pattern in the administration’s health-policy posture. Since January, federal agencies have moved to rescind guidance that promoted abortion and weakened conscience protections, while reasserting the principle that federal programs should not be used to fund or encourage elective abortion.














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