1977
Feb.: Mission Possible
is launched - - a project of Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life, an
NRLC state affiliate, to provide organizational development assistance
and matching grant "seed" money for developing state right to life
groups, primarily in the Southeastern United States.
June 20: In Maher
v. Roe, Beal v. Doe, and Poelker v. Doe, the U.S. Supreme
Court holds that federal and state governments are under no obligation
to fund abortion in public assistance programs, even if childbirth
expenses are paid for indigent women and even if the abortion is deemed
to be "medically necessary."
July: NRLC Pro-Life
Legal Action Project is initiated to provide and fund the legal defense
for pro-life legislation and to seek affirmative legal action to obtain
the judicial implementation of pro-life goals.
1979
June: A major pro-life
book is released. Dr. Bernard Nathanson, the National Abortion Rights
Action League cofounder who renounced the pro-abortion movement,
publishes Aborting America, which exposes the lies used by
abortion supporters in their quest to overturn legislation protecting
unborn children.
Sept. 15-16: National
Right to Life PAC is organized.
1980
Jan. 10: NRLC files a friend-of-the-court
brief with the U.S. Supreme Court on behalf of the Hyde Amendment.
June 30: In Harris
v. McRae, the U.S. Supreme Court upholds the Hyde Amendment, ruling
that there is no constitutional right for women to receive abortions at
public expense.
Nov. 4: Republican
pro-life candidates Ronald Reagan and George Bush defeat pro-abortion
President Jimmy Carter and Vice President Walter Mondale. In addition, a
remarkable 11 Senate seats switched from the pro-abortion column to the
pro-life column. It is the first year NRL PAC is involved in elections.
1981
Mar. 23: In H.L. v.
Matheson, the U.S. Supreme Court approves a Utah parental
notification law. The law requires an abortionist to notify the parents
of a minor girl who is still living at home as her parent's dependent
when an abortion is scheduled.
July 9: A U.S. Senate
subcommittee approves a bill sponsored by Sen. Helms designed to
challenge Roe v. Wade. (See also Sept. 15, 1982.)
Dec. 16: A U.S.
Senate subcommittee approves a constitutional amendment proposed by Sen.
Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) declaring that the Constitution secures no right to
abortion. (See also Sept. 15, 1982.)
1982
Mar. 10: The Senate Judiciary Committee
approves the Hatch Amendment, which would give the states and Congress
joint authority to regulate abortion.
Mar. 27-28: NRLC
Board of Directors adopts a resolution supporting the Hatch Amendment,
the Human Life Bill, and the NRLC Unity Amendment.
April.: French
researcher Dr. Etienne-Emile Beaulieu of Roussel Uclaf announces that a
test was conducted using the abortifacient RU 486 to abort 11 women.
Sept. 15: The Helms
bill to challenge Roe v. Wade is blocked by a pro-abortion
filibuster in the U.S. Senate.
1983
June 15: In Akron
v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, the U.S. Supreme Court
strikes down state requirements that abortions performed after the first
trimester be done in a hospital, women's right to know laws, and waiting
periods after information is provided to the woman seeking abortion
before she can consent to an abortion. However, the Court rules that
states may insist that only licensed physicians perform abortions.
June 28: The U.S.
Senate rejects the Eagleton-Hatch Amendment, which declared "a right to
an abortion is not secured by the Constitution," by a vote of 49-50. A
two-thirds vote is required to pass a constitutional amendment.
Nov. 10: The U.S.
Congress approves the Ashbrook Amendment, barring the use of federal
employees health benefits program to pay for abortions, except for the
life of the mother.
1984
June 17: The Reagan Administration announces
the "Mexico City Policy," denying funds to foreign organizations that
"perform or actively promote abortion as a method of family planning in
other nations."
Nov. 6: Pro-life
President Reagan is reelected, defeating the pro-abortion Democratic
ticket of former Vice President Walter Mondale and Rep. Geraldine
Ferraro.
1985
Jan. 7: Pro-Life Perspective, NRLC's
daily radio program, is first aired.
June: National Teens
for Life is founded.
July 10: U.S. House
reaffirms the Mexico City Policy by a 45-vote margin. The Kemp/Kasten
Amendment is also enacted, denying U.S. population-assistance funds to
"any organization or program which, as determined by the President,
supports or participates in the management of a program of coercive
abortion or involuntary sterilization."
July 15: U.S. Justice
Department files a friend-of-the-court brief in the Thornburgh case
urging the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade.
1986
June 11: In Thornburgh v. American College
of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the U.S. Supreme Court strikes
down state laws mandating that an abortionist use the method most likely
to allow the child to be born alive in post-viability abortions. It also
strikes down women's right to know laws and a waiting period after
information is provided to the woman seeking abortion before she can
consent to an abortion.
Sept. 17: Sen. Ted
Kennedy (D-Ma.) and other leading pro-abortion senators fail in an
attempt to block President Reagan's promotion of Associate Justice
William Rehnquist to chief justice. Antonin Scalia is confirmed to
replace Rehnquist as an associate justice.
1987
July 30: President Reagan announces at a
meeting of pro-life activists that "a program which does provide
counseling and referral for abortion services as a method of family
planning will not be eligible for Title 10 funds." (See July 2, 1988.)
Aug. 25: President
Reagan appoints a federal task force to encourage adoption as an
alternative to abortion.
Oct. 23: Nomination
of pro-life Judge Robert Bork to the U.S. Supreme Court is rejected by
the U.S. Senate, 58-42. Pro-abortion groups conducted a fierce campaign,
which resulted in his defeat. This seat ultimately went to Anthony
Kennedy, who voted to reaffirm the core holdings of Roe in 1992.
1988
March.: The Reagan
Administration issues a moratorium on new federally funded fetal tissue
transplant research.
July 2: The U.S.
District Court in New York upholds the constitutionality of Reagan
Administration regulations barring Title 10 programs from involvement in
abortion.
Sept. 23: The French
government approves licensing of RU 486 for use in the country.
Sept. 26: The U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issues an "Import Bulletin" banning
the importation of RU 486 for personal use.
Sept. 30: The U.S.
Senate passes an amendment to the District of Columbia appropriations
bill to bar D.C. from paying for abortions or performing abortions in
its city-operated hospital. Since the U.S. House had already passed the
amendment, it goes into effect immediately.
Oct. 29: The French
government orders Roussel Uclaf to reverse its Oct. 27 decision to halt
distribution of RU 486.
Nov. 8: Pro-life
Republican candidates Vice President George Bush and Dan Quayle defeat
pro-abortion Democratic candidates Michael Dukakis and Lloyd Bentsen.
1989
Apr. 9: Pro-abortion supporters hold a rally
in Washington, D.C. Although the media reported attendance at 300,000, a
Park Police captain told congressmen he would have estimated between
75,000 and 85,000.
July 3: In Webster
v. Reproductive Health Services, the U.S. Supreme Court, upholding
portions of a Missouri law, finds that the federal Constitution does not
require government to make public facilities such as hospitals available
for use in performing abortions.
Nov. 17: The
so-called "Freedom of Choice Act" is introduced for the first time in
the U.S. House by Rep. Don Edwards (D-Ca.) and in the U.S. Senate by
Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Ca.). (See also Mar. 5, 1992; June 30, 1993.)
Nov. 18: Pennsylvania
Gov. Robert Casey signs the Abortion Control Act. (See also June 29,
1992.)
Nov. 22: President
Bush vetoes a foreign aid appropriations bill because it contains the
Mikulski Amendment, which would have restored funding to the UNFPA, an
organization that played a key role in China's coercive
population-control program. This program violates the 1985 Kemp-Kasten
Amendment, which denied U.S. "population assistance" to any organization
that "supports or participates in the management of a program of coerced
abortion or involuntary sterilization."
1990
Mar. 7: A federal
court in New York dismisses Planned Parenthood's lawsuit challenging the
Mexico City Policy.
Mar. 30: Idaho Gov.
Cecil Andrus vetoes a law that would have prohibited the use of abortion
as a means of birth control.
Apr. 28: Over 300,000
pro-lifers flock to Washington, D.C., for the NRLC-organized Rally for
Life >90.
May 22: The
Washington Post reports that Roussel Uclaf has changed its policy
and will market RU 486 outside France.
June 25: In Ohio
v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, the U.S. Supreme Court
upholds a one-parent notification requirement with a judicial bypass
procedure. The Court also rules, in Hodgson v. Minnesota, that a
two-parent notification law with a judicial bypass is constitutional.
June 26: In a letter
to key U.S. House leaders, President Bush restates his commitment to
both the Kemp/Kasten Amendment and the "Mexico City" policy, which cut
off U.S. aid to organizations that promote the legalization and
utilization of abortion in foreign nations.
June 27: U.S. House
rejects a proposal to fund two organizations that promote abortion in
less-developed nations by a vote of 224-198.
July 1-4: "Abortion
and the Media," a four-part Los Angeles Times series by David
Shaw, documents the widespread pro-abortion media bias.
Aug. 1: The AFL-CIO
Executive Council rejects a proposal for the union to abandon its
traditional neutrality on abortion and take a pro-abortion stance.
1991
Jan. 25: The French
Council of State rules that the government did not have the authority to
force Roussel Uclaf to resume distribution of RU 486. The decision
removes Roussel's excuse that it had no choice but to continue
distributing the drug.
May 23: In Rust v.
Sullivan, the U.S. Supreme Court upholds the Bush Administration's
regulations that prohibit routine counseling and referral for abortion
in 4,000 clinics that receive federal Title Ten family planning funds.
[In November, President Bush vetoes a $205 billion health and human
services appropriations bill because it includes a provision that would
have blocked enforcement of the pro-life regulations; the veto is
sustained by a 12-vote margin.]
June 3: In a letter
to House Speaker Thomas Foley, President Bush vows, AI will veto any
legislation that weakens current law or existing regulations" pertaining
to abortion.
June 18: The
Louisiana legislature overrides Gov. Buddy Romer's veto of a law
protecting unborn children from abortion in all cases other than when
the life of the mother is at stake or in cases of rape or incest. (See
also Mar. 8, 1993.)
July 1: President
Bush nominates Judge Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court. (See also
Oct. 15, 1991.
Oct. 15: The U.S.
Senate confirms the nomination of pro-life Judge Thomas to the Supreme
Court by a vote of 52-48.
Oct. 25: Ana Rosa
Rodriguez survives a third-trimester abortion attempt by New York City
abortionist Abu Hayat, but is born with one arm severed at the shoulder.
(See also Feb. 22, 1993.)
Nov.: Threat of Bush
veto maintains the Reagan-era ban on the performance of abortion on U.S.
military bases, except to save the mother's life.
1992
Feb.: Bush
Administration threatens to veto legislation that would require federal
funding of research that encourages or depends on abortion, including
transplantation of tissue harvested from aborted babies.
Mar. 5: President
Bush vows that the radically pro-abortion Freedom of Choice Act "will
not become law as long as I am President of the United States."
June 29: In
Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the U.S. Supreme Court reaffirms the
core holdings of Roe but modifies it by discarding the trimester
scheme, upholding certain restrictions on abortion, and adopting the
"undue burden" test of abortion laws that requires opponents of an
abortion regulation to prove the provision would create an "undue
burden" on a woman's right to abortion in order for it to be declared
unconstitutional. The vote is 6-3.
July 13: The U.S.
House sustains President Bush's veto of a bill to require federal
funding for transplanting tissue taken from aborted babies by a narrow
14-vote margin.
Sept. 13: A gruesome
abortion technique is described by abortionist Martin Haskell at a
National Abortion Federation seminar. The technique, later called
"partial-birth abortion" by Congress, involves the abortionist
delivering all but the head of a baby from her mother's womb, piercing
the skull, and suctioning out the brain, then completing the delivery.
Nov. 3: Pro-abortion
Democratic candidates Gov. Bill Clinton and Sen. Al Gore defeat pro-life
President George Bush and Vice President Dan Quayle.
1993
Jan. 22: President Clinton reverses years of
pro-life progress by issuing five executive orders reversing Title 10
regulations banning abortion referral by federal employees, repealing
the Mexico City Policy restricting federal funding of international
organizations that work to reverse countries' abortion laws, negating
the ban on funding for fetal tissue transplants, ordering military
hospitals to perform abortions, and asking the FDA to "review" the
import ban on RU 486.
Feb. 22: Abortionist
Abu Hayat is convicted of assault and illegal abortion for his attempt
to kill Ana Rosa Rodriguez by abortion.
Mar. 8: The U.S.
Supreme Court refuses to hear an appeal of a lower court ruling striking
down Louisiana's protective abortion law.
Apr. 14: The Los
Angeles Times reports that the Clintons plan to include coverage for
elective abortion in their massive health care plan that they intend to
propose to Congress later in the year. (See also Sept. 26, 1994.)
May 12: NRL News
reports that all obstetrics staff at U.S. Army, Navy, and Air Force
hospitals in Europe are unwilling to perform abortions, despite
President Clinton's executive order authorizing them to do so.
June 18: Pro-lifers
demonstrate against RU 486 at sites across the United States.
June 30: The U.S.
House renews the Hyde Amendment by an 85-vote margin. An NRLC-led
lobbying campaign defeats the so-called "Freedom of Choice Act," a
proposed federal statute to invalidate even the narrow types of state
abortion regulations permitted by the Supreme Court.
Nov. 22: The Clinton
Administration announces that the International Planned Parenthood
Federation will receive $75 million over the next five years.
Dec. 28: The Clinton
Administration faxes a letter to every state's Medicaid director
ordering the states to change their laws and provide payments for
abortions when an abortionist reports that a pregnancy resulted from
rape or incest.
1994
Jan.: The American Council of Obstetricians
and Gynecologists' Executive Board becomes the first national doctors'
organization to endorse training non-physicians to perform abortions.
Feb. 3: Mother Teresa
speaks at the National Prayer Breakfast in front of Bill and Hillary
Clinton, saying "the greatest destroyer of peace today is abortion."
Apr. 20: First annual
"Proudly Pro-Life" Awards Banquet is held in New York City.
May 15: Roussel Uclaf
donates U.S. patent rights for RU 486 to the Population Council.
June 30: In Madsen
v. Women's Center Inc., the U.S. Supreme Court says judges may
create buffer zones to keep pro-life demonstrators away from abortion
clinics.
Sept. 26: Senate
Majority Leader George Mitchell (D-Me.) announces that the Clinton
Health Care Plan will not be introduced in the U.S. Senate in the
current session. A massive public education and lobbying campaign, led
by NRLC, contributes heavily to the ultimate defeat of the Clinton
proposal to force all Americans into a national health system that would
ration lifesaving care and pay for abortion on demand.
Oct. 27: The
Population Council announces that testing of RU 486 is underway in the
United States.
Nov. 8: In nationwide
congressional elections, not a single pro-life member of Congress, of
either party, is defeated by a pro-abortion challenger. Republicans take
over majority control of both houses of Congress. Pro-lifers pick up six
votes in the Senate and about 40 in the House.
1995
Mar. 30: Pope John
Paul II publishes the encyclical The Gospel of Life, a call to
commitment and action in defense of human life.
June: National
College Students for Life is founded.
June 14: Rep. Charles
Canady (R-Fl.) introduces the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act in the U.S.
House of Representatives.
Aug. 10: Norma McCorvey, the "Jane Roe" of
Roe v. Wade, tells a nationwide audience on Nightline that
she rejects abortion and the pro-abortion movement and now supports the
right to life of unborn children. She had already revealed that this
pregnancy was not the product of a rape - - as she had previously
contended - - showing that Roe had been built on a lie.
Aug. 18: NRLC
launches its web site at
www.nrlc.org.
Aug. 22: Abortionist
David Benjamin is convicted of second-degree murder in the
botched-abortion death of Guadalupe Negron. He is the first New York
abortionist to be convicted of murder.
Nov. 1: The U.S.
House passes the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, the first federal bill
since Roe v. Wade to ban one type of abortion, with a vote of
288-139.
Dec. 7: The U.S.
Senate passes the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, 54-44.
1996
Apr. 10: President
Clinton issues his first veto of the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act.
May 2: A new federal law is enacted to protect
medical training programs and personnel from being forced to participate
in performing or training in the performance of abortions. President
Clinton reluctantly signs the measure as part of an omnibus spending
bill.
July 19: The Food and
Drug Administration's Reproductive Health Advisory Committee recommends
that the FDA approve marketing of RU 486 for women up to 49 days
pregnant.
Sept. 11: Planned
Parenthood announces the FDA authorized a nationwide abortion study of
methotrexate and misoprostol, another abortifacient combination.
Sept. 18: The FDA
declares RU 486 Aapprovable," although it asks the Population Council to
provide more information on "labeling and manufacturing practices"
before the drug can be marketed.
Nov. 5: Pro-abortion
President Clinton and Vice President Gore defeat the pro-life Republican
ticket of Bob Dole and Jack Kemp.
1997
Jan.: The PBS
documentary program Media Matters documents pervasive
pro-abortion bias and distortion in major media coverage of the
partial-birth abortion debate.
Feb.: Ron
Fitzsimmons, head of the National Coalition of Abortion Providers, tells
journalists he "lied through my teeth" in claiming that partial-birth
abortions were performed very rarely and only for extraordinary medical
reasons, explaining that he had just "spouted the party line" developed
by leaders of other pro-abortion groups.
Mar. 20: The House
passes the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act by a veto-proof margin of
295-136.
Apr. 8: Hoechst AG
announces it is ceasing all future production, marketing, and
distribution of RU 486. Instead, it says it is transferring all rights
to the abortifacient in the U.S. to the Population Council and worldwide
to Edouard Sakiz, former Roussel Uclaf president.
May 20: The American
Medical Association's Board of Trustees endorses the Partial-Birth
Abortion Ban Act.
May 21: The U.S.
Senate, in its second attempt, passes the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act
64-36, three votes short of the majority needed to override President
Clinton's expected veto.
June 16: The U.S.
Supreme Court upholds a Montana law that requires that abortions be
performed only by physicians, not their assistants.
Oct. 10: President
Clinton again vetoes the ban on partial-birth abortions.
Dec. 8: Fortune
magazine declares NRLC the 10th "most powerful" public interest group in
the country. The pro-abortion National Abortion and Reproduction Rights
Action League is only No. 43 and Planned Parenthood ranks 65th
1998
Feb. 12: Sen. Spencer
Abraham (R-Mi.) introduces the Child Custody Protection Act into the
U.S. Senate, which would make it illegal for adults to transport minors
across state lines for an abortion if that action would circumvent the
parental involvement law of a state.
Apr. 1: Rep. Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fl.) introduces the Child Custody Protection Act into
the U.S. House of Representatives.
Apr. 30:
Results of a U.S. trial of RU 486 are published in the New England
Journal of Medicine. The Population Council declares the drug "safe"
downplaying the serious complications suffered by many women.