Senate Democrats raise 'profound concerns' over Trump administration website for new moms
Key takeaways
- Moms.gov, launched on Mother s Day, features resources from 2,750 pregnancy centers, which Planned Parenthood calls crisis pregnancy centers that it says are traditionally run by anti-abortion advocates.
- The senators alleged in a letter to President Trump and Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F.
- This raises profound concerns about the health, safety, and privacy of people who access this government website at a time when women s health and reproductive rights face increasing attacks, the senators wrote.
Why this matters: political developments that affect policy direction and public trust.
Moms.gov, launched on Mother s Day, features resources from 2,750 pregnancy centers, which Planned Parenthood calls crisis pregnancy centers that it says are traditionally run by anti-abortion advocates.
The senators alleged in a letter to President Trump and Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. that these centers are typically staffed by unlicensed health workers and volunteers, who have been repeatedly found to provide medically inaccurate information.
This raises profound concerns about the health, safety, and privacy of people who access this government website at a time when women s health and reproductive rights face increasing attacks, the senators wrote.