Then-president Donald Trump addresses thousands of pro-life activists at the 47th annual March for Life in Washington, D.C., January 24, 2020. (Leah Millis/Reuters)

A few days ago, National Review alumna Audrey Fahlberg had a piece in The Free Press talking about a possible pro-life revolt against Donald Trump. It is, of course, hard not to read these kinds of analyses of late and wonder if there were actually pro-life advocates who fully believed Donald Trump was ever a convert to their cause. His pitch for a second term was certainly clarifying for anyone who was hoping against hope: The Republicans took ending abortion in the United States out of their platform. Anyone who wasn’t born after he registered Republican knows that was one of the most consistently hard-fought aspects of every presidential convention. It was a litmus test for pro-life ...

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