IVF and the GOP
Can the Republican party support fertility treatments without alienating its base?
THE ALABAMA SUPREME COURT set off political tremors last week with its decision that frozen embryos have the status of “extrauterine children” and thus are covered by a state law that permits parents to seek damages for the wrongful death of a “minor child.” The implication that in vitro fertilization (IVF) cannot be practiced if embryos have legal standing led some commentators immediately to describe the ruling as a “ban.” Alabama’s attorney general issued a statement reassuring people that IVF providers and patients would not face prosecution, even as clinics around the state were phoning their patients to cancel procedures. There is, IVF industry representatives told lawmakers and the press, too much risk of legal liability if a clinic accidentally causes the death of an embryo by piercing it with a pipette; or if, in consultation with parents, it discards a genetically damaged embryo; or if a power failure causes freezers to malfunction. The possible lawsuits are limitless.
Democrats seized on the decision as evidence that Republican extremists were gunning for IVF, and Republicans, burned once too often by abortion at the ballot box, rushed to assure voters that they reject the ruling and urged the Alabama legislature to amend the law forthwith. Former President Trump led the way by proclaiming that “Under my leadership, the Republican Party will always support the creation of strong, thriving, healthy American families. We want to make it easier for mothers and fathers to have babies, not harder!”
Jason Thielman, executive director of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, circulated a letter to candidates urging, “When responding to the Alabama Supreme Court ruling, it is imperative that our candidates align with the public’s overwhelming support for IVF and fertility treatments.” (The procedure seems anecdotally to be broadly popular, although the polling data on IVF is sparse and suggests that public opinion is less settled on the thorny questions relating to the disposition of embryos “left over” following IVF treatment.) Rep. Byron Donalds, a Freedom Caucus member, said, “I totally support the procedure” and offered that he would support federal legislation to protect IVF. Senator Tommy Tuberville was confused about the nature of the Supreme Court ruling, telling a group at CPAC “I was all for it. . . . We need to have more kids,” but he seems to have gotten the memo about the GOP’s message. Speaker Mike Johnson affirmed his support, saying IVF “has been a blessing for many moms and dads who have struggled with fertility.”
The problem with the GOP’s newfound enthusiasm for IVF is that it contradicts other positions the party has taken to please pro-life voters. In the last Congress, more than 160 House Republicans, including Johnson, cosponsored H.R. 1011, the “Life at Conception Act,” which extends Fourteenth Amendment protections to include “preborn human person[s],” declaring “that the right to life guaranteed by the Constitution is vested in each human being at all stages of life, including the moment of fertilization, cloning [sic], or other moment at which an individual comes into being.”
Republicans have also marched in lockstep to oppose the Right to Contraception Act introduced by Democrats because it would have included methods, such as IUDs and the morning-after pill, that some consider abortifacients. It’s hard to square support for IVF, which, as practiced in the United States, nearly always entails the loss of fertilized eggs, with opposition to Plan B because it may result in the loss of a fertilized egg.
Maybe the lesson here is that doctrinaire approaches to these matters are not right. Life is full of tradeoffs. Johnson is right that IVF has been a blessing for millions, and that includes many people who think of themselves as pro-life. For every 100 Americans born today, between one and two will have been conceived through IVF. By 2015, more than one million Americans were born as a result of IVF or similar technologies. For people diagnosed with cancer, IVF can preserve their fertility until after they have completed chemotherapy. For couples who are carriers of genetic diseases like cystic fibrosis, sickle cell anemia, Tay-Sachs, and more than 400 other disorders, IVF can allow embryos to be tested before transfer to ensure that the disease is not present. Is that a pro-life gift to the world? Millions of Americans think it is—even though the procedure involves the loss of embryonic human life. It isn’t a failing to recognize that these matters are murky and sometimes we do act on moral instinct more than on bright lines.
Intentionally ending a life at any stage is not something to be taken lightly. It is possible to approach the process ethically and even reverently. Some people of faith, along with others of no religious persuasion, make decisions in advance about how to handle the question of “excess” embryos that have not been transferred after IVF treatment (only a fraction of transfers result in implantation and pregnancy). Some place frozen embryos for adoption. Others have larger families than they might have originally intended because they regard the frozen embryos as their children.
It’s difficult for a political party to escape its brand. Just as Democrats will have difficulty convincing voters they aren’t soft on illegal immigration, Republicans won’t easily escape the association with hard-line abortion positions, including opposition to certain kinds of contraception. The personhood bills that four states have enacted and a dozen others are considering draw a harsh line on matters like IVF, which does entail making life-and-death decisions about frozen embryos. The voters may force Republicans to reconsider their blanket support for personhood bills. Perhaps pro-natalism is the pro-life position the GOP needs.