vlog

Skip to content
NOWCAST vlog News at Noon Weekdays
Watch on Demand
Advertisement

Planned Parenthood wins partial victory in legal fight with Trump administration over funding cuts

Planned Parenthood wins partial victory in legal fight with Trump administration over funding cuts
POLITICAL REPORTER JACKIE MUNDRY HAS THE DETAILS ON THIS LAWSUIT. PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP'S ONE BIG BEAUTIFUL BILL DOES NOT ALLOW MEDICAID PAYMENTS TO BE MADE TO ABORTION PROVIDERS... NAMING PLANNED PARENTHOOD SPECIFICALLY. "WE BELIEVE THAT EVERYONE HAS THE RIGHT TO CHOOSE A HEALTH CARE PROVIDER THAT THEY TRUST IN THEIR LOCAL COMMUNITY." 01;41;26;07 OLIVIA PENNINGTON WITH MAINE FAMILY PLANNING SAYS HER ORGANIZATION HAS LOST ITS ABILITY TO GET MAINE CARE REIMBURSEMENTS NOW THAT PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP'S BIG BEAUTIFUL BILL IS LAW. "RIGHT NOW, WE ARE NOT ABLE TO BUILD MAINE CARE, SO WE ARE CONTINUING TO SEE MAINE CARE PATIENTS AND CREATING A STACK OF CLAIMS THAT WE'RE HOPING WILL BE ABLE TO BACK BILL." 01;42;11;00 LAST YEAR MAINE FAMILY PLANNING SAW 72-HUNDRED PATIENTS... INCLUDING MORE THAN 600 FOR ABORTION... THERE ARE ALSO ABOUT 800 GENDER AFFIRMING CARE PATIENTS. WHICH IS WHY THEY ARE HOPING THE COURT SYSTEM REINSTATES THESE PAYMENTS. "THE COURTS DON'T INTERVENE AND IF OUR FUNDING IS CONTINUED TO BE THREATENED, AT SOME POINT, SOMETHING'S GOING TO HAVE TO GIVE. AND WITHIN THE NEXT TWO YEARS, WE COULD BE TALKING ABOUT MAKING REALLY DIFFICULT DECISIONS." 01;42;20;17 NOT ONLY DOES THE ORGANIZATION SEE ITS OWN PATIENTS... IT ALSO ALLOCATES FUNDING TO OTHER CLINICS THAT DO THE SAME KIND OF WORK... INCLUDING PLANNED PARENTHOOD. IN A STATEMENT PLANNED PARENTHOOD OF NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND WROTE IN PART -- THE AGENCY REMAINS COMMITTED TO DOI
AP logo
Updated: 10:23 PM CDT Jul 21, 2025
Editorial Standards
Advertisement
Planned Parenthood wins partial victory in legal fight with Trump administration over funding cuts
AP logo
Updated: 10:23 PM CDT Jul 21, 2025
Editorial Standards
Planned Parenthood won a partial victory Monday in a legal fight with President Donald Trump’s administration over efforts to defund the organization in his signature tax legislation.Related video above: Maine Family Planning sues Trump administration over block on Medicaid paymentsA provision in that bill ends Medicaid payments for one year to abortion providers that received more than $800,000 from Medicaid in 2023, even to those like Planned Parenthood that also offer things like contraception, pregnancy tests and STD testing.But U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani in Boston granted a preliminary injunction Monday that, for now, blocks the government from cutting Medicaid payments to Planned Parenthood member organizations that either don’t provide abortion care or didn’t meet a threshold of at least $800,000 in Medicaid reimbursements in a given year.It wasn’t immediately clear how many Planned Parenthood organizations and clinics would continue to get Medicaid reimbursements under that decision and how many might not.Planned Parenthood said in a statement after the injunction that it's thankful the court recognized “the harm” caused by the bill. But it said it's disappointed that some of its members will lose this funding, “risking chaos, confusion, and harm for patients who could now be turned away when seeking lifesaving reproductive health care.”“The court has not yet ruled on whether it will grant preliminary injunctive relief to other members,” the statement added. "We remain hopeful that the court will grant this relief. There will be nothing short of a public health crisis if Planned Parenthood members are allowed to be ‘defunded.’”The lawsuit was filed earlier this month against Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. by Planned Parenthood Federation of America and its member organizations in Massachusetts and Utah.Planned Parenthood argued that allowing the provision to take effect would have devastating consequences nationwide, including increased rates of undiagnosed and untreated sexually transmitted diseases and cancer.“With no reason other than plain animus, the law will prevent Planned Parenthood Members from providing vital — indeed, lifesaving — care to more than one million patients,” they wrote. “This statute is unconstitutional and will inflict irreparable harm on Planned Parenthood Members and their patients."Lawyers for the government argued in court documents that the bill “stops federal subsidies for Big Abortion.”“All three democratically elected components of the Federal Government collaborated to enact that provision consistent with their electoral mandates from the American people as to how they want their hard-earned taxpayer dollars spent,” the government wrote in its opposition to the motion.The government added that the plaintiffs “now want this Court to reject that judgment and supplant duly enacted legislation with their own policy preferences. ... That request is legally groundless.”Hours after the lawsuit was filed, Talwani issued a temporary restraining order that prevented the government from enforcing the cuts. That order had been set to expire Monday.

Planned Parenthood won a partial victory Monday in a legal fight with President Donald Trump’s administration over efforts to defund the organization in his signature tax legislation.

Related video above: Maine Family Planning sues Trump administration over block on Medicaid payments

Advertisement

A provision in that bill ends Medicaid payments for one year to abortion providers that received more than $800,000 from Medicaid in 2023, even to those like Planned Parenthood that also offer things like contraception, pregnancy tests and STD testing.

But U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani in Boston granted a preliminary injunction Monday that, for now, blocks the government from cutting Medicaid payments to Planned Parenthood member organizations that either don’t provide abortion care or didn’t meet a threshold of at least $800,000 in Medicaid reimbursements in a given year.

It wasn’t immediately clear how many Planned Parenthood organizations and clinics would continue to get Medicaid reimbursements under that decision and how many might not.

Planned Parenthood said in a statement after the injunction that it's thankful the court recognized “the harm” caused by the bill. But it said it's disappointed that some of its members will lose this funding, “risking chaos, confusion, and harm for patients who could now be turned away when seeking lifesaving reproductive health care.”

“The court has not yet ruled on whether it will grant preliminary injunctive relief to other members,” the statement added. "We remain hopeful that the court will grant this relief. There will be nothing short of a public health crisis if Planned Parenthood members are allowed to be ‘defunded.’”

The lawsuit was filed earlier this month against Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. by Planned Parenthood Federation of America and its member organizations in Massachusetts and Utah.

Planned Parenthood argued that allowing the provision to take effect would have devastating consequences nationwide, including increased rates of undiagnosed and untreated sexually transmitted diseases and cancer.

“With no reason other than plain animus, the law will prevent Planned Parenthood Members from providing vital — indeed, lifesaving — care to more than one million patients,” they wrote. “This statute is unconstitutional and will inflict irreparable harm on Planned Parenthood Members and their patients."

Lawyers for the government argued in court documents that the bill “stops federal subsidies for Big Abortion.”

“All three democratically elected components of the Federal Government collaborated to enact that provision consistent with their electoral mandates from the American people as to how they want their hard-earned taxpayer dollars spent,” the government wrote in its opposition to the motion.

The government added that the plaintiffs “now want this Court to reject that judgment and supplant duly enacted legislation with their own policy preferences. ... That request is legally groundless.”

Hours after the lawsuit was filed, Talwani issued a temporary restraining order that prevented the government from enforcing the cuts. That order had been set to expire Monday.